Solling, Bramwald and Reinhardswald

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Solling, Bramwald and Reinhardswald is the name for a geographical natural space unit, which counts as main unit 370 to the Lower Saxony mountainous region . It is a low mountain range built from red sandstone to which Solling , Reinhardswald and Bramwald belong. The Weser and the associated Weser breakthrough valley separates the Reinhardswald from the Solling and the Bramwald, while the latter are separated from each other by the Nieme . The area is largely forested, so that forestry use predominates. The precipitation is well above the national average. It belongs partly to Hesse and partly to Lower Saxony .

Natural structure

The main natural unit of Solling, Bramwald and Reinhardswald is structured as follows:

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Various authors: Geographische Landesaufnahme: The natural spatial units in single sheets 1: 200,000 . Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1952–1994. → Online maps
    • Sheet 99: Göttingen (Jürgen Hövermann 1963; 36 pages)
    • Sheet 112: Kassel (Hans-Jürgen Klink 1969; 108 pages)