Osnabrück Uplands

Osnabrück Uplands
Highest point
Peak Hesterbrink
Elevation 232.5 m (763 ft)
Dimensions
Length 30 km (19 mi)
Area 748.5 km2 (289.0 sq mi)
Geography
State Lower Saxony
Range coordinates 52°16′N 8°03′E / 52.27°N 8.05°E / 52.27; 8.05Coordinates: 52°16′N 8°03′E / 52.27°N 8.05°E / 52.27; 8.05
Parent range Lower Weser Uplands, Lower Saxon Hills

The Osnabrück Uplands, Osnabrück Hills or, less commonly, Osnabrück Hill Country (German: Osnabrücker Hügelland or Osnabrücker Bergland), are the low hills, or Hügelland, rarely over 200 m above NHN, in the northwest of the Lower Saxon Hills near Osnabrück in Germany. They are bounded by the Wiehen Hills to the north and the Teutoburg Forest to the south.[1] Regionally, especially in tourism, they are often referred to locally as the Osnabrücker Bergland, however this is usually not a precisely defined physical landscape, but refers to an area roughly comprising the municipal boundaries of Osnabrück and a narrow radius around the city. By contrast the natural region major unit known as the Osnabrücker Hügelland extends from north-west of Ibbenbüren to the Melle Hills north of Melle, behind which is their south-eastern continuation, the Ravensberg Hills.

The Osnabrück Uplands form the heart of the cultural region of Osnabrück Land. The unpopulated areas of the region, which covers 748.5 km²,[1] are a central part of the TERRA.vita Nature and Geopark.

Natural regions

The Osnabrück Uplands are divided from north (west to east) to south (west to east) as follows:[2]

Hills

Among the most important high points in the Osnabruck Uplands aer the following – sorted by height in metres (m) above sea level (NHN):

Literature

External links

References

  1. 1 2 Emil Meynen, Josef Schmithüsen: Handbook of the Natural Region Divisions of Germany. Bundesanstalt für Landeskunde, Remagen/Bad Godesberg, 1953–1962 (9 issues in 8 books, updated map 1:1.000,000 scale with major units, 1960).
  2. Various authors: Geographische Landesaufnahme: The natural region units in individual 1:200,000 map sheets. Bundesanstalt für Landeskunde, Bad Godesberg, 1952–1994. → Online maps
    • Sheet 83/84: Osnabrück/Bentheim (Sofie Meisel 1961; 66 pp.) → map (pdf, 6.6 MB)
    • Sheet 85: Minden (Sofie Meisel 1959; 50 pp. – only 535.03) → map (pdf, 4.6 MB)
  3. 1 2 The Hüggel is a borderline case. The hill, which is a northwestern spur of the Dörenberg, was still listed in the Handbook of the Natural Region Divisions of Germany (6th issue, 1959) as one of the highest points of the Osnabruck Uplands, but in the Osnabrück/Bentheim sheet (1961) is shown as part of the Osnabruck Osning (Osnabrücker Osning), i.e. the northwestern part of the Teutoburg Forest.
  4. Topographic map with Hesterbrink (Moselerberg) (DTK 25; see enlargement of the map), at natur-erleben.niedersachsen.de
  5. The Holzhauser Berg has no officially surveyed summit point, but a not insignificant proportion of the summit lies above the 225 metre contour.
  6. Artikel über das Naturschutzgebiet Steinernes Meer
  7. Die Ruinen der Wittekindsburg, at rulle.de
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