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List of dams and reservoirs in Germany

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

These are dams and reservoirs in Germany.

The German word Talsperre (literally: valley barrier) may mean dam, but it is often used to include the associated reservoir as well.[1] The reservoirs are often separately given names ending in -see, -teich or -speicher which are the German words for "lake", "pond" and "reservoir", but in this case all may also be translated as "reservoir". The more specific word for the actual dam is Staumauer and for the lake is Stausee.

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Transcription

Baden-Württemberg

Bavaria

Brandenburg

Hesse

  • Aar Dam
  • Affoldern Reservoir
  • Antrift Dam
  • Diemelsee (reservoir)
  • Driedorf Reservoir
  • Edersee

Lower Saxony

North Rhine-Westphalia

  • Aabach Dam
  • Agger Dam
  • Ahauser Reservoir
  • Baldeney Reservoir
  • Bever Dam
  • Beyenburg Reservoir
  • Biggesee
  • Borchen Flood Control Basin
  • Breitenbach Dam
  • Bruchbachtal-Büderich Flood Control Basin
  • Bruch Dam
  • Dahlhausen Dam
  • Diepental Dam
  • Große Dhünn Dam
  • Dreilägerbach Dam
  • Ebbinghausen Flood Control Basin
  • Eicherscheid Flood Control Basin
  • Eiserbach Dam
  • Ennepe Dam
  • Eringerfeld Flood Control Basin
  • Eschbach Dam
  • Esmecke Reservoir
  • Fuelbecke Dam
  • Fürwigge Dam
  • Genkel Dam
  • Glingebach Dam
  • Glör Dam
  • Gollentaler Grund Flood Control Basin
  • Hengsteysee
  • Kall Dam
  • Kemnader See
  • Möhne Reservoir
  • Olef Dam
  • Perlenbach Dam
  • Rur Dam
  • Sorpe Reservoir
  • Steinbachtal Dam
  • Urft Dam
  • Wahnbach Dam
  • Wehebach Dam
  • Wupper Dam

Saxony

Saxony-Anhalt

Thuringia

In Thuringia there are 171 reservoirs. The biggest of them are:

  • Bleiloch Dam (biggest reservoir in Germany, volume: ~215 million m³), river Saale
  • Deesbach Forebay (height 42.5 m; volume ~3.2 million m³), river Lichte
  • Haselbach Reservoir (~25 million m³), flooded opencast mining area
  • Hohenwarte Reservoir (volume: ~182 million m³), river Saale
  • Leibis-Lichte Dam (height 102.5 m; volume ~32,4 million m³), river Lichte
  • Neustadt Dam - Thuringia's oldest dam
  • Schmalwasser Dam (~21,2 million m³), river Schmalwasser
  • Schönbrunn Dam (~23,2 million m³), river Schleuse
  • Zeulenroda Dam (~30,4 million m³), river Weida

See also

References

  1. ^ Worsch, Wolfgang. Großwörterbuch Deutsch-Englisch, Langescheidt Muret-Sanders, Langescheidt KG, 2004, p. 1010. ISBN 3-468-02126-7
  2. ^ "Rappbodetalsperre". www.talsperren.net (in German). Retrieved 17 October 2009.
This page was last edited on 24 May 2024, at 10:33
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