Car hard
Car hard | |
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Highest peak | nameless hilltop near Hüttenreute ( 698 m above sea level ) |
location | near Bad Saulgau ; Districts of Ravensburg and Sigmaringen , Baden-Württemberg ( Germany ) |
Coordinates | 47 ° 57 ' N , 9 ° 28' E |
Location of Wagenhart in the Tübingen administrative region of Baden-Württemberg
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The Wagenhart is up to 698 m above sea level. NHN high, wooded ridge near Bad Saulgau in the districts of Ravensburg and Sigmaringen in Upper Swabia , Baden-Württemberg (Germany).
geography
location
The Wagenhart is located in the triangle of Bad Saulgau in the north, Altshausen in the southeast and Ostrach in the southwest. In the form of an elongated arch in the municipal areas of Bad Saulgau and Ostrach (Sigmaringen district) and Hoßkirch (Ravensburg district), its highest point ( 698 m ) is an unnamed mountain top near the Hüttenreute district of Hoßkirch.
Natural allocation
The core area of the Wagenhart is an old moraine plate . It belongs to the natural spatial main unit group Donau-Iller-Lech-Platte (No. 04), in the main unit Danube-Ablach-Platten (040) and in the sub-unit Saulgau Altmoränenplatten (040.2) to the natural area Fulgenstädter Platten (040.24).
The highest elevations of the ridge are on the young moraine of its southern edge, which within the main unit group Subalpines Jungmoränenland (03) and the main unit Upper Swabian hill country (032) the natural area young moraine of the Wagenhart (according to different numbering on sheet Lindau the western part of 030.23) or , Designation on the sheet, which only contains marginal parts, forms Ulm, Saulgau terminal moraine area (032.10).
The border between the two major natural regions runs over the Wagenhart approximately in a north-east-south-west direction, each close to the southern edge.
Surveys
The surveys of Wagenhart include - sorted by height in meters (m) above sea level (NHN):
- nameless knoll ( 698 m ), 500 m north-north-west of Hüttenreute - young moraine
- nameless knoll on the back of Frankenbuch ( 697.8 m ), 500 m east of Heratskirch - young moraine
- nameless summit ( 693 m ), directly north of Hoßkirch - young moraine
- nameless knoll ( 686.9 m ), a good 1 km north-northeast of Hüttenreute - young moraine
- nameless summit ( 682.4 m ), directly west of Heratskirch - young moraine
- nameless knoll ( 663.3 m ), 1.5 km east of Ostrach - young moraine
- nameless summit ( 655.9 m ), 1 km east-southeast of Bolstern - old moraine
Rhine-Danube watershed
About the Wagenhart runs as part of the European watershed , the Rhine-Danube watershed section Ostrach-Bad Saulgau. For example, the water of the Seebach , which runs south of the ridge west-northwest, flows through the Ostrach , which turns north, and the Danube to the Black Sea . This is countered by that of the Riedgraben, which initially flows eastwards south of the ridge, the upper reaches of the Mühlbach , through the Hühler Ach , the Booser Ach and the south-facing Schussen into Lake Constance , thus into the Rhine and finally into the North Sea .
Transport links
A little to the east past Wagenhart in the Bad Saulgau − Altshausen section leads the federal road 32 , from which state and district roads lead to the forest landscape. The section Bad Saulgau− Tafertsweiler (part of the municipality of Ostrach ) of the western route of the Upper Swabian Baroque Road leads northwest past the ridge as part of the L 280 branching off the B 32, which cuts through or touches four northern foothills . South of Wagenhart, the L 286 connects Altshausen with Ostrach. Otherwise only forest and farm roads lead through the ridge.
The Altshausen – Schwackenreute railway line , which was reactivated in the Altshausen– Pfullendorf section after its closure in 2004 in summer 2009, runs south past Wagenhart.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
- ↑ a b c Hansjörg Dongus : Geographical land survey: The natural spatial units on sheet 187/193 Lindau / Oberstdorf. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1991. → Online map (PDF; 6.1 MB)
- ^ Emil Meynen , Josef Schmithüsen (editor): Handbook of the natural spatial structure of Germany . Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Remagen / Bad Godesberg 1953–1962 (9 deliveries in 8 books, updated map 1: 1,000,000 with main units 1960).
- ↑ a b c State Institute for the Environment Baden-Württemberg (LUBW) ( information )
- ^ A b Hans Graul: Geographical land survey: The natural space units on sheet 179 Ulm. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1952. → Online map (PDF; 4.8 MB)
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↑ a b The mountain is shown in the LUBW map service as (barely) belonging to the Donau-Ablach plates , but clearly belongs to the youth moraines - cf. Sheet 187/193 as well as:
GeoViewer of the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Raw Materials ( information ).