The Central or Middle Ore Mountains ( German : Mittlere Erzgebirge or Mittelerzgebirge ) is a natural region that forms the central-western part of the Ore Mountains in the German federal state of Saxony . It is part of the overarching unit, the Saxon Highlands and Uplands . It forms the eastern part of the former major units, the Lower Western Ore Mountains ( Unteres Westerzgebirge , 423) and Upper Western Ore Mountains ( Oberes Westerzgebirge , 421) and is separated from the Eastern Ore Mountains in the east by the (included) valley of the Flöha , and from the Western Ore Mountains in the west by the (excluded) valley of the Schwarzwasser and, below its mouth, by the Zwickauer Mulde .
75-649: The upper regions of the Central Ore Mountains are part of the Ore Mountains/Vogtland Nature Park . 50°36′N 13°00′E / 50.6°N 13.0°E / 50.6; 13.0 This Ore Mountains article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Ore Mountains The Ore Mountains ( German : Erzgebirge , Czech : Krušné hory ) lie along the Czech–German border, separating
150-707: A Hercynian block tilted so as to present a steep scarp face towards Bohemia and a gentle slope on the German side. They were formed during a lengthy process. During the folding of the Variscan orogeny , metamorphism occurred deep underground, forming slate and gneiss . In addition, granite plutons intruded into the metamorphic rocks. By the end of the Palaeozoic era, the mountains had been eroded into gently undulating hills (the Permian massif ), exposing
225-453: A loamy , rapidly weathered gneiss in the east of the mountains producing a light soil. As a result of the subsoils based on granite and rhyolite, the land is mostly covered in forest ; on the gneiss soils it was possible to grow and cultivate flax in earlier centuries and, later, rye , oats and potatoes up to the highlands. Today the land is predominantly used for pasture . But it is not uncommon to see near-natural mountain meadows. To
300-686: A cover up for the Eastern Bloc's highly secretive uranium mining. For the third time in history, thousands of people poured into the Ore Mountains to build a new life. The principal mining areas were located around Johanngeorgenstadt , Schlema and Aue . Uranium ore deposits were also exploited for the Soviet Union in Bohemian Jáchymov (St. Joachimsthal). Its processing was associated with serious health consequences for
375-761: A fourth period, the Quaternary , was applied. In the early development of the study of geology, the periods were thought by scriptural geologists to correspond to the Biblical narrative, the rocks of the Tertiary being thought to be associated with the Great Flood . In 1833, Charles Lyell incorporated a Tertiary Period into his own, far more detailed system of classification, based on fossil mollusks he collected in Italy and Sicily in 1828-1829. He subdivided
450-548: A height of 807 m above sea level (NN) on the mountain of Komáří vížka which lies on the Czech side, east of Zinnwald-Georgenfeld , right on the edge of the fault block. Consequently, it is a fault-block mountain range, which has been incised by a whole range of river valleys whose rivers drain southwards into the Ohře and northwards into the Mulde or directly into
525-504: A height of 922 m above sea level (NN) , on average only about 140 frost-free days per year are observed. Based on reports of earlier chroniclers, the climate of the upper Ore Mountains in past centuries must have been even harsher than it is today. Historic sources describe hard winters in which cattle froze to death in their stables, and occasionally houses and cellars were snowed in even after snowfalls in April. The population
600-528: A large number of Bohemian Protestants then fled into the neighbouring Electorate of Saxony . As a result, many Bohemian villages became devastated and desolate, while on the Saxon side new places were founded by these migrants, such as the mining town of Johanngeorgenstadt . Ore mining largely came to a standstill in the 17th century, especially after the Thirty Years' War . Due to the very sharp decline of
675-488: A leading centre of wood and toy manufacturing. Here, wooden smoking figures , nutcrackers , hand-carved wooden trees ( Spanbäume ), candle arches , ( Schwibbogen ), Christmas pyramids and music boxes are made. Up to the last third of the 20th century, Coal was mined near Zwickau until 1978, around Lugau and Oelsnitz until 1971 and in the Döhlen Basin near Freital until 1989. The mountains that until
750-438: A length of 120 km. The eastern Ore Mountains are protected landscape. Other smaller areas on the German and Czech sides are protected as nature reserves and natural monuments. On the ridges there are also several larger raised bogs that are only fed by rainwater. The mountains are popular for hiking and there are winter sports areas at higher elevations. In 2019, the region became a UNESCO World Heritage Site . In English,
825-454: A literal translation of the German name, and Vyšehory , meaning "high mountains". In Upper Sorbian the mountains are known as the Rudne horiny . The German and Upper Sorbian names, as well as the historical Czech Rudohoří , literally mean "ore mountains". The Ore Mountains are geologically considered to be one of the most heavily researched mountain ranges in the world. The Ore Mountains are
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#1732771756166900-704: A long time, so that for about 100 years the blue colour works had a worldwide monopoly. From about 1820 in Johanngeorgenstadt, uranium was also extracted and was then used to colour glass, amongst other things. Even richer deposits of uranium ore were found in St. Joachimsthal. St. Andrew's White Earth Mine ( Weißerdenzeche St. Andreas ) at Aue supplied kaolin to the Meissen Porcelain Factory in Meissen for nearly 150 years. Its export from
975-546: A result of settlement in the early 12th century at the northern edge of the Ore Mountains, the first silver ore was discovered in the vicinity of present-day Freiberg , resulting in the First Berggeschrey or mining rush. Almost simultaneously, the first tin ore was discovered on the southern edge of the mountains in Bohemia. In the 13th century, colonization of the mountains took place only sporadically along
1050-465: A second trending north–south from Freiberg through Marienberg, Annaberg, Niederschlag, Joachimsthal, and Schlaggenwald. Late Tertiary faulting and volcanism gave rise to basalt and phonolite dikes . Ore veins include iron, copper, tin, tungsten, lead, silver, cobalt, bismuth, uranium, plus iron and manganese oxides. The most important rocks occurring in the Ore Mountains are schist , phyllite and granite with contact metamorphic zones in
1125-660: Is Krušné hory , derived from an old Czech expression krušec , meaning "ore". The mountains are sometimes divided into the Saxon Ore Mountains and Bohemian Ore Mountains. A similarly named range in Slovakia is usually known as the Slovak Ore Mountains . Europe's earliest mining district appears to be located in Erzgebirge, dated to 2500 BC. From there tin was traded north to
1200-406: Is a protected landscape. Further small areas are nature reserves and natural monuments, and are protected by the state. Tertiary Tertiary ( / ˈ t ɜːr . ʃ ə . r i , ˈ t ɜː r . ʃ i ˌ ɛr . i / TUR -shə-ree, TUR -shee-err-ee ) is an obsolete term for the geologic period from 66 million to 2.6 million years ago. The period began with the extinction of
1275-478: Is seen historically as part of the Ore Mountains, Chemnitz is seen historically as just lying outside them, but Freiberg is included. The supposed limit of the Ore Mountains continues southwest of Dresden towards the Elbe Sandstone Mountains . From this perspective, its main characteristics, i.e., gently sloping plateaus climbing up to the ridgeline incised by V-shaped valleys , continue to
1350-793: The Baltic Sea and south to the Mediterranean following the Amber Road trading route, of great importance in the Bronze Age . Tin mining knowledge spread to other European tin mining districts from Erzgebirge and evidence of tin mining begins to appear in Brittany , Devon and Cornwall , and in the Iberian Peninsula around 2000 BC. These deposits saw greater exploitation when they fell under Roman control between
1425-691: The Elbe . The main geologic feature in the Ore Mountains is the Late Paleozoic Eibenstock granite pluton , which is exposed for 25 miles along its northwest–southeast axis and up to 15 miles in width. This pluton is surrounded by progressive zones of contact metamorphism in which Paleozoic slates and phyllites have been changed to spotted hornfels , andalusite hornfels, and quartzites . Two key mineral centres intersect this pluton at Joachimsthal, one trending northwesterly from Schneeberg through Johanngeorgenstadt to Joachimsthal, and
1500-774: The Lusatian Mountains , the Iser Mountains , the Giant Mountains and the Inner-Bohemian Mountains . At the same time it forms a y-shaped mountain chain, along with the Upper Palatine Forest, Bohemian Forest, Fichtel Mountains , Franconian Forest , Thuringian Slate Mountains and Thuringian Forest , that has no unique name but is characterised by a rather homogeneous climate. According to cultural tradition, Zwickau
1575-929: The Mesozoic Era and the Quaternary Period , although it is no longer recognized as a formal unit by the International Commission on Stratigraphy . The span of the Tertiary is subdivided into the Paleocene (66–56 million years BP ), the Eocene (56–33.9 million years BP), the Oligocene (33–23.9 million years BP), the Miocene (23–5.3 million years BP) and the Pliocene (5.3–2.6 million years BP), extending to
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#17327717561661650-717: The Western , Central and Eastern Ore Mountains , separated by the valleys of the Schwarzwasser and Zwickauer Mulde and the Flöha (" Flöha Line "), the division of the western section along the River Schwarzwasser is of a more recent date. The Eastern Ore Mountains mainly comprise large, gently climbing plateaux, in contrast with the steeper and higher-lying western and central areas, and are dissected by river valleys that frequently change direction. The crest of
1725-420: The discovery of large ore deposits the area was further renamed in the 16th century. Petrus Albinus used the name Erzgebirge ("Ore Mountains") for the first time in 1589, in his chronicle. In the early 17th century, the name Meißener Berge ("Meissen Mountains") was temporarily used. A quarter of a century later the names Erzgebirge in German and Rudohoří in Czech became established. The Czech toponym
1800-414: The engineering and textile industries . In 1789 the chemical element uranium was discovered in St. Joachimsthal; then in pitchblende from the same area, radium was discovered by Marie Curie in 1898. In the late 1930s, following the discovery of the nuclear fission , uranium ore became of particular interest for military purposes. After the incorporation of Sudetenland into Germany in 1938 all
1875-703: The loess hill country to the north between Zwickau and Chemnitz is referred to as the Ore Mountain Basin ; that from the Eastern Ore Mountains as the Ore Mountain Foreland . Between Freital and Pirna , the area is called the Dresden Ore Mountain Foreland ( Dresdner Erzgebirgsvorland ) or Bannewitz-Possendorf-Burkhardswald Plateau ( Bannewitz-Possendorf-Burkhardswalder Plateau ). Geologically
1950-426: The 12th century onwards, and even the forests owned by the nobility could not cover the growing demand for wood. In the 18th century, industries were encouraged to use coal as fuel instead of timber in order to preserve the forests, and this was enforced in the 19th century. In the early 1960s the first signs of forest dieback were seen in the Eastern Ore Mountains near Altenberg and Reitzenhain , after local damage to
2025-664: The 21st century, the working group Naturhaushalt und Gebietscharakter of the Saxon Academy of Sciences ( Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften ) in Leipzig merged the Ore Mountains with the major unit group of Vogtland to the west and the major landscape units of Saxon Switzerland , Lusatian Highlands and Zittau Mountains to the east into one overarching unit, the Saxon Highlands and Uplands . In addition, its internal divisions were changed. Former major unit 420
2100-469: The 9th century, were only used in a general sense for the vast forests of the Central Uplands. Frequently the term Miriquidi is used to refer directly to the Ore Mountains, but it only surfaces twice in the 10th and early 11th centuries, and these sources do not permit a clear identification with the ancient forest that formerly covered the whole of the Ore Mountains and its foreland. Following
2175-472: The Bohemian Way ( antiqua Bohemiae semita ). It was here that Sayda was built, a station on the trade route from Freiberg via Einsiedl , Johnsdorf and Brüx to Prague. In Sayda it joined the so-called salt road that ran from Halle via Oederan and onto Prague. Glass-making was introduced into the region from the second half of the 13th century. The emergence of this branch of trade benefited from
2250-467: The Bohemian mining town of Graupen (Czech Krupka ) its name. With the further settlement of the Ore Mountains in the 15th century, new, rich, ore deposits were eventually discovered around Schneeberg Annaberg and St. Joachimsthal . The Second Berggeschrey started and triggered a massive wave of colonization. In quick succession, new, planned, mining towns were built across the Ore Mountains in
2325-468: The Czech side, is actually the highest town in Central Europe . Only on the relatively inaccessible, less climatically favourable ridges are there still large, contiguous forests, but since the 18th century these have been managed economically. Due to the high demand for timber by the mining and smelting industries, where it was needed for pit props and fuel, large-scale deforestation took place from
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2400-686: The Early Tertiary and the Late Tertiary, respectively. Even though the term Tertiary has been declared obsolete, some high school curriculums still teach the geologic periods as Precambrian, Paleozoic, Mesozoic, (Cenozoic-)Tertiary and (Cenozoic-)Quaternary. The term Tertiary was first used by Giovanni Arduino during the mid-18th century. He classified geologic time into primitive (or primary), secondary, and tertiary periods based on observations of geology in Northern Italy . Later
2475-716: The Eastern Ore Mountains by narrow fingers of the aforementioned basin. South(east) of the Western Ore Mountains lie the Sokolov Basin , the Eger Graben and the Doupov Mountains . To the north the boundary is less sharply defined because the Ore Mountains, a typical example of a fault-block , descend very gradually. The topographical transition from the Western and Central Ore Mountains to
2550-589: The Eastern Ore Mountains. Here, the artisans were required by Prince-Elector Augustus under the Timber Act of 1560, to buy their wood in Bohemia. Wood from the Saxon Ore Mountains was still needed for the mines and smelters in Freiberg. This export of timber led, among other things, to the construction of an artificial cross-border rafting channel, the Neugrabenflöße , along the river Flöha . Because of
2625-556: The Elbe Valley zone. The western part of the Ore Mountains is home to the two highest peaks of the range: Klínovec , located in the Czech part, with an altitude of 1,244 metres (4,081 ft) and Fichtelberg , the highest mountain of Saxony, Germany, at 1,214 metres (3,983 ft). The Ore Mountains are part of a larger mountain system and adjoin the Fichtel Mountains to the west and the Elbe Sandstone Mountains to
2700-771: The Ore / ɔːr / Mountains are sometimes referred to as the Ore Mountain Range , but are also sometimes called the Erzgebirge [ˈeːɐ̯tsɡəˌbɪʁɡə] or Erz Mountains / ɛər t s , ɜːr t s / after their German name or the Krušné Mountains / ˈ k r ʊ ʃ n i , - n eɪ / after their Czech name. In Czech they are the Krušné hory [ˈkruʃnɛː ˈhorɪ] , from old Czech krušec , meaning "piece of ore", and were historically known as Rudohoří ,
2775-909: The Ore Mountains reach the city limits of Dresden at the Windberg hill near Freital and the Karsdorf Fault . The V-shaped valleys of the Ore Mountains break through this fault and the shoulder of the Dresden Basin . The Ore Mountains belong to the Bohemian Massif within Europe's Central Uplands, a massif that also includes the Upper Palatine Forest , the Bohemian Forest , the Bavarian Forest ,
2850-428: The Ore Mountains remains unchanged under the title of Southern Ore Mountains ( Süderzgebirge ). The climate of the higher regions of the Ore Mountains is characterised as distinctly harsh. Temperatures are considerably lower all year round than in the lowlands, and the summer is noticeably shorter and cool days are frequent. The average annual temperatures only reach values of 3 to 5 °C. In Oberwiesenthal , at
2925-461: The Ore Mountains was given new life during the First and Second World Wars in order to supply raw materials. Nazi Germany also saw the resumption of silver mining. Afterwards the people returned to the manufacture of wooden products and toys , especially in the Eastern Ore Mountains. The clock industry is centred on Glashütte . In the Western Ore Mountains, economic alternatives were offered by
3000-599: The Tertiary Period into four epochs according to the percentage of fossil mollusks resembling modern species found in those strata . He used Greek names: Eocene, Miocene, Older Pliocene, and Newer Pliocene. Although these divisions seemed adequate for the region to which the designations were originally applied (parts of the Alps and plains of Italy), when the same system was later extended to other parts of Europe and to America, it proved to be inapplicable. Therefore,
3075-444: The abundance of excess timber, which was created by clearings and new settlements and which was able to meet the high demand of the glassworks. Monks from Waldsassen Abbey brought a knowledge of the glass manufacture to the Ore Mountains. Most glassworks were located in the vicinity of Moldau , Brandau and the Frauenbach valley . The oldest glassworks site is Ulmbach . This timber-hungry industry lost its importance, however, with
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3150-405: The boom in mining, which also enjoyed royal patronage. Mining on the Bohemian side of the mountains probably began in the 14th century. An indication of this is a contract between Boresch of Riesenburg and the Ossegg abbot, Gerwig, in which the division of revenue derived from ore was agreed. Grains of tin ( Zinnkörner or Graupen ) were obtained at that time in the Seiffen mining area and gave
3225-409: The border. From west to east: In the division of Germany into natural regions that was carried out Germany-wide in the 1950s the Ore Mountains formed major unit group 42: Even after the reclassification of natural regions by the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation in 1994 the Ore Mountains, region D16 , remained a major unit group with almost unchanged boundaries. However, at the beginning of
3300-481: The crest of the mountains, such as the Freiberg Mines Water Management System or the Reitzenhainer Zeuggraben . Only a few mines remained profitable over a long period. Amongst them was the Himmelsfürst Fundgrube near Erbisdorf , whose 50 continuous years of profitable operation were commemorated in 1818 with the issue of a commemorative coin ( Ausbeutetaler ) and which went on to make a profit continuously until 1848. Thanks to discoveries of rich ore seams it became
3375-409: The decline in industrial production in that period, people without any ties migrated to the interior of Germany or Bohemia. After the discovery of the cobalt blue pigments the mining industry experienced a revival. Cobalt was extracted especially in Schneeberg, and processed in the state paintworks to produce cobalt blue paints and dyes. They succeeded in keeping the method of production secret for
3450-422: The early 1990s. In St. Egidien and Aue there were important nickel smelting sites. In Pöhla in the Western Ore Mountains, during exploratory work for SDAG Wismut new, rich lodes of tin ore were discovered in the 1980s. The test workings of that time are now considered the largest tin finds in Europe. Another well-known place of tin production was Seiffen . The village in the Eastern Ore Mountains has become
3525-408: The east. Past the River Elbe , the mountain chain continues as the Lusatian Mountains . While the mountains slope gently away in the northern (German) part, the southern (Czech) slopes are rather steep. The Ore Mountains are oriented in a southwest–northeast direction and are about 150 km long and, on average, about 40 km wide. From a geomorphological perspective the range is divided into
3600-433: The forests had become apparent since the 19th century as a result of smelter smoke ( Hüttenrauch ). The German population of the Bohemian part of the Ore Mountains was expelled in 1945 in accordance with to the Beneš decrees . The upper western part of the Ore Mountains, known in German as Erzgebirge , belongs to the Ore Mountains/Vogtland Nature Park . The eastern part, called the Eastern Ore Mountains ( Osterzgebirge ),
3675-420: The hard rocks. In the Tertiary period these mountain remnants came under heavy pressure as a result of plate tectonic processes during which the Alps were formed and the North American and Eurasian plates were separated. As the rock of the Ore Mountains was too brittle to be folded, it shattered into an independent fault block which was uplifted and tilted to the northwest. This can be very clearly seen at
3750-517: The heartland of the Central European mining industry. New ore discoveries attracted more and more people, and the number of residents on the Saxon side of the mountains continued to rise rapidly. Bohemia, in addition to migration from within the country, also received migration from elsewhere, mainly of German miners, who settled in the mountain villages and in the towns at the edge of the mountains. Under Emperor Ferdinand II an unprecedented Re-Catholicization began in Bohemia from 1624 to 1626, whereupon
3825-409: The heavy amounts of snow a natural Dwarf Mountain Pine region is found near Satzung , near the border to Bohemia at just under 900 m above sea level (NN) . By comparison, in the Alps these pines do not occur until 1,600 to 1,800 m above sea level (NN) . The term Saltusbohemicus ("Bohemian Forest") for the region emerged in the 12th century. In the German language
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#17327717561663900-479: The historical regions of Bohemia in the Czech Republic and Saxony in Germany. The highest peaks are the Klínovec in the Czech Republic (German: Keilberg ) at 1,244 metres (4,081 ft) above sea level and the Fichtelberg in Germany at 1,215 metres (3,986 ft). The Ore Mountains have been intensively reshaped by human intervention and a diverse cultural landscape has developed. Mining in particular, with its tips, dams, ditches and sinkholes, directly shaped
3975-484: The landscape and the habitats of plants and animals in many places. The region was also the setting of the earliest stages of the early modern transformation of mining and metallurgy from a craft to a large-scale industry, a process that preceded and enabled the later Industrial Revolution . The higher altitudes from around 500 m above sea level on the German side belong to the Ore Mountains/Vogtland Nature Park – the largest of its kind in Germany with
4050-400: The late 11th (and early 12th century) were covered in dense forests were almost completely transformed into a cultural landscape by the mining industry and by settlement . The population density is high right up into the upper regions of the mountains. For example, Oberwiesenthal , the highest town in Germany, lies in the Ore Mountains, and neighbouring Boží Dar (German: Gottesgab ) on
4125-479: The miners. In addition a dam burst in 1954 at Lengenfeld at a uranium mining waste lake; 50,000 cubic metres of waste water poured down 4 kilometres into the valley. Until 1991 uranium ore was also mined in Aue- Alberoda and Pöhla . Mining operations in Freiberg that had begun in 1168 finally ceased in 1968 after 800 years. In Altenberg and Ehrenfriedersdorf tin mining continued to 1991. The smelting of these ores took place mainly in Muldenhütten until
4200-428: The mining industry and because the search for new ore deposits proved fruitless, the population had to resort to other occupations. Agricultural yields were low, however, and also the demand for wood was reduced by the closure of smelteries. Many people were already active at that time in textile production. However, since that was not enough for subsistence, the manufacture of wooden goods and toys developed, especially in
4275-402: The mining industry. Settlement in the Ore Mountains was slow to begin with, especially on the Bohemian side. The harsh climate and short growing seasons hindered the cultivation of agricultural products. Nevertheless, settlements were supported by the aristocratic Hrabischitz family and established mainly at the foot of the mountains and along mountain streams into the deep woods. In 1168, as
4350-419: The most productive Freiberg mine of the 19th century. But even the excavation of the Rothschönberger Stolln , the largest and most important Saxon drainage adit, which drained the entire Freiberg district, could not stop the decline of mining. Because even before the completion of this technical achievement the German Empire introduced the gold standard in 1871, the price of silver dropped rapidly and led to
4425-420: The mountains themselves forms, in all three regions, a succession of plateaux and individual peaks. To the east it is adjoined by the Elbe Sandstone Mountains and, to the west, by the Elster Mountains and other Saxon parts of the Vogtland . South(east) of the Central and Eastern Ore Mountains lies the North Bohemian Basin and, immediately east of that, the Bohemian Central Uplands which are separated from
4500-456: The names Böhmischer Wald , Beheimer Wald , Behmerwald or Böhmerwald were used, in Czech the name Český les . The last-mentioned names are used today for the mountain range along the Czech Republic's southwestern border ( see: Bohemian Forest ). From earlier research, other names for the Ore Mountains have also appeared in a few older written records. However, the names Hircanus Saltus ( Hercynian Forest) or Fergunna , which appeared in
4575-405: The non- avian dinosaurs in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event , at the start of the Cenozoic Era , and extended to the beginning of the Quaternary glaciation at the end of the Pliocene Epoch . The time span covered by the Tertiary has no exact equivalent in the current geologic time system, but it is essentially the merged Paleogene and Neogene periods, which are informally called
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#17327717561664650-405: The north of the Ore Mountains, west of Chemnitz and around Zwickau lies the Ore Mountain Basin which is only really known geologically. Here there are deposits of stone coal where mining has already been abandoned. A similar but smaller basin with abandoned coal deposits, the Döhlen Basin , is located southwest of Dresden on the northern edge of the Ore Mountains. It forms the transition to
4725-412: The range. The highest elevation on the Saxon side is the 1,215-metre-high Fichtelberg , which was the highest mountain in East Germany . The Ore Mountains contain about thirty summits with a height over 1,000 m above sea level (NN) , but not all are clearly defined mountains. Most of them occur around the Klínovec and the Fichtelberg. About a third of them are located on the Saxon side of
4800-413: The southern edge of the Dresden Basin . North of the Ore Mountains the landscape gradually transitions into the Saxon Lowland and Saxon Elbeland . Its cultural-geographical transition to Saxon Switzerland in the area of the Müglitz and Gottleuba valleys is not sharply defined. The highest mountain in the Ore Mountains is the Klínovec (German: Keilberg ), at 1,244 metres, in the Bohemian part of
4875-438: The state, however, was prohibited by the Prince-electors under threat of severe punishment or even death. Towards the end of the 19th century, mining slowly declined again. Drainage costs increased, from the mid-19th century, led to a steady decrease in yield, despite sinking of deeper galleries ( Erbstollen ) and the expansion of ditch and tunnel ( Rösche ) systems for supplying the necessary water for overshot wheels from
4950-481: The third century BC and the first century AD. Demand for tin created a large and thriving network amongst Mediterranean cultures of Classical times . By the Medieval period, Iberia's and Germany's deposits lost importance and were largely forgotten while Devon and Cornwall began dominating the European tin market. From the time of the first wave of settlement, the history of the Ore Mountains has been heavily influenced by its economic development, especially that of
5025-418: The unprofitability of the entire Ore Mountain silver mining industry. This situation was not altered even by short-term discoveries of rich deposits in various mines nor the state's purchase of all the Freiberg mines and their incorporation into the state-owned enterprise, Oberdirektion der Königlichen Erzbergwerke , founded in 1886. In 1913, the last silver mines closed and the company was disbanded. Mining in
5100-409: The upper reaches of the mountains. Since a large part of the precipitation falls as snow , in many years a thick and permanent layer of snow remains until April. The ridges of the Ore Mountains are one of the snowiest areas in the German Central Uplands . Foehn winds, and also the so-called Bohemian Wind may occur during certain specific southerly weather conditions. As a result of the climate and
5175-411: The uranium production facilities were commandeered for the development of nuclear weapons. After the American atomic bomb was dropped on Japan in 1945, Soviet experts searched for evidence of the German nuclear energy project to support Soviet atomic bomb development . Shortly thereafter, the processing of uranium ore for the Soviet Union began in the Ore Mountains under the code name SAG Wismut ,
5250-424: The use of mollusks was abandoned from the definition and the epochs were renamed and redefined. For much of the time during which the term 'Tertiary' was in formal use, it referred to the span of time between 65 and 1.8 million years ago. The end date of the Cretaceous and the start date of the Quaternary were subsequently redefined at c. 66 and 2.6 million years ago respectively. The Tertiary period lies between
5325-399: The vicinity of newly discovered ore deposits. Typical examples are the towns of Marienberg , Oberwiesenthal , Gottesgab ( Boží Dar ), Sebastiansberg ( Hora Sv. Šebestiána ) and Platten ( Horní Blatná ). Economically, however, only silver and tin ores were used. From that time, the wealth of Saxony was built on the silver mines of the Ore Mountains. As a metal used for coinage, silver
5400-480: The west, basalt as remnants in the Plešivec (Pleßberg), Scheibenberg , Bärenstein , Pöhlberg , Velký Špičák ( Großer Spitzberg or Schmiedeberger Spitzberg ), Jelení hora ( Haßberg ) and Geisingberg as well as gneisses and rhyolite ( Kahleberg ) in the east. The soils consist of rapidly leaching grus . In the western and central areas of the mountains it is formed from weathered granite. Phyllite results in
5475-475: Was grouped with the western part of major units 421 and 423 to form a new major unit, the Western Ore Mountains ( Westerzgebirge ), the eastern part of major units 421 and 423 became the Central Ore Mountains ( Mittelerzgebirge ) and major units 422 and 424 became the Eastern Ore Mountains ( Osterzgebirge ). The current division therefore looks as follows: The geographic unit of the Southern Slopes of
5550-517: Was minted on site in the mountain towns into money. The Joachimsthaler coins, minted in the valley of Joachimsthal , became famous and gave their name to the medieval coin known as the Thaler from which the word " dollar " is derived. After the end of the Hussite Wars , the economy in Bohemia, which had been disrupted by the conflict, recovered. In the 16th century the Ore Mountains became
5625-431: Was regularly cut off from the outside world. The upper Ore Mountains was therefore nicknamed Saxon Siberia already in the 18th century. The fault block mountain range that climbs from northwest to southeast, and which enables prolonged rain to fall as orographic rain when weather systems drive in from the west and northwest, gives rise to twice as much precipitation as in the lowlands which exceeds 1,100 mm on
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