Sulauberach
Sulauberach Sulzenaubach |
||
The Sulauberach near the Sulzenaualm |
||
Data | ||
Water code | AT : 2-8-153-50-14 | |
location | Stubai Alps , Tyrol , Austria | |
River system | Danube | |
Drain over | Ruetz → Sill → Inn → Danube → Black Sea | |
origin | at Sulzenauferner 46 ° 59 '18 " N , 11 ° 9' 32" E |
|
Source height | approx. 2485 m above sea level A. | |
muzzle | at the Grabaalm in the Ruetz coordinates: 47 ° 0 '52 " N , 11 ° 11' 22" E 47 ° 0 '52 " N , 11 ° 11' 22" E |
|
Mouth height | 1497 m above sea level A. | |
Height difference | approx. 988 m | |
Bottom slope | approx. 20% | |
length | 4.9 km | |
Catchment area | 18 km² | |
Right tributaries | Freigerbach | |
Communities | Neustift in the Stubai Valley |
The Sulauberach , also called Sulzenaubach , is a glacier brook and right feeder of the Ruetz in the Stubai Alps in Tyrol.
Run and landscape
The Sulauberach rises from the Sulzenauferner at an altitude of around 2500 m , then flows in a north-easterly direction and takes the runoff of the blue paints from the right. When Sulzenau he plunges over a steep step 200 m is decreasing, the by Grünausee coming Freigerbach, and then flows through the Sulzenau, a relatively shallow trough valley , where he has trained a large, branched bed with rearrangement distances. It falls over another step in the 180 m high Grawa waterfall into the Stubai Valley and flows into the Ruetz at the Grabaalm.
Catchment area
The catchment area of the Sul Zauberach is 18.0 km² and, in addition to the Sulzenauferner, includes other glaciers such as the Fernerstube, the Wilden-Freiger-Ferner, the Aperen-Freiger-Ferner and the Kleiner Grünauferner, which together cover an area of around 7 km² (as of 1988 ) and make up 39% of the catchment area. The highest point in the catchment area is the Zuckerhütl at 3507 m above sea level. A.
ecology
The entire course of the Sulauberach lies in the Serles-Habicht-Zuckerhütl conservation area . The overall ecological condition is rated as very good, the bank and bottom are natural. In the flat sections, the dynamics of erosion and sedimentation have formed relocation stretches that allow a diverse range of special flora and fauna. The Grawa waterfall has been declared a natural monument.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f TIRIS - Tyrolean spatial information system
- ^ Austrian map 1: 50,000
- ^ Max H. Fink, Otto Moog, Reinhard Wimmer: Flowing waters - natural areas of Austria . Umweltbundesamt Monographs Volume 128, Vienna 2000, pp. 46–48 ( PDF; 475 kB )
- ↑ Leopold Füreder: Diversity through disturbance - natural rivers. In: Rudolf Hofer (Ed.): The Alps. Insights into nature. alpine space - man & environment: Volume 9, Innsbruck University Press, Innsbruck 2009, pp. 35–40 ( PDF; 36.3 MB )