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Ammersee

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Ammersee (English: Lake Ammer ) is a Zungenbecken lake in Upper Bavaria , Germany, southwest of Munich between the towns of Herrsching and Dießen am Ammersee . With a surface area of approximately 47 square kilometres (18 sq mi), it is the sixth largest lake in Germany. The lake is at an elevation of 533 metres (1,749 ft), and has a maximum depth of 81 metres (266 ft). Like other Bavarian lakes, Ammersee developed as a result of the ice age glaciers melting. Ammersee is fed by the River Ammer, which flows as the Amper out of the lake. Like neighbouring Lake Starnberg - deeper, bigger in surface area, similar in shape - it is a popular location for watersports .

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31-771: Ammersee and the Amper are part of the ancient Celtic amber trading route leading to the Brenner Pass . The word Ammer is a 13th-century form of Amper , the Celtic *ambra , deriving from the Indo-European *ombh- , *mbh- "wet, Water". Passenger services have operated on the lake since 1879. Today they are operated by the Bayerische Seenschifffahrt company, using a mixture of historic paddle steamers and motor ships. The water quality, which

62-666: A new species of fish, the Ammersee Kaulbarsch ( Gymnocephalus ambriaelacus ), which is also found only in the Ammersee, was described. With the nature reserves Vogelfreistätte Ammersee-Südufer (in which the Schwedeninsel is also located), Seeholz and Seewiese as well as Ampermoos , the Ammersee is one of the seven internationally important wetlands in Bavaria according to the so-called Ramsar Convention. On

93-761: Is a municipality in the Weilheim-Schongau district, in Bavaria , Germany . It is situated 7 km southwest of Weilheim in Oberbayern . Peißenberg has two train stations, Peißenberg and Peißenberg Nord . Both are situated on the Weilheim–Peißenberg railway and offer hourly connections to Augsburg . The aeroclub Weilheim -Peißenberg flying at Paterzell airfield is rather successful in glider aerobatics : 2006 German National Champion Markus Feyerabend and Hans-Georg Resch are members of

124-570: Is indicated by names such as Trifthof for an industrial park in Weilheim. This Trifthof was built in 1611. To bring the tree trunks further across the Ammersee to Dachau , they were connected to form drift rafts. Two hydropower plants are of historical importance. As early as 1891/92, the first hydropower plant in Bavaria was built by Oskar von Miller in Schöngeising. The world's first rail power station for single-phase alternating current,

155-486: Is known, a whitefish species mainly found in the pre-Alpine lakes, whose occurrence has led to a long tradition of quite intensive fishing exploitation of the lake. The lake is also home of the vulnerable species of deepwater char Salvelinus evasus . Deepwater char are highly sensitive to changes in the quality of the water and some species such as Salvelinus neocomensis and Salvelinus profundus were driven recently to extinction in other European lakes. In 2010, even

186-734: Is of touristic importance. Along the Ammer, the Schleier waterfalls south of Bad Bayersoien and the Echelsbacher Bridge are the most important sights. Long stretches of the river are lined with cycle paths that allow tours from the Alps to the mouth of the Amper at Moosburg an der Isar. Driving on the Ammer and Amper with canoes or similarly manoeuvrable boats is possible over almost the entire route, but not allowed all year round. Boating on

217-747: The Ammersee , through which it runs, is the largest tributary of the Isar in southern Bavaria , Germany. It flows generally north-eastward, reaching the Isar in Moosburg , about 185 kilometres (115 mi) from its source in the Ammergau Alps , with a flow of 45 m³/s. Including its tributary, Linder , it is 209.5 km (130.2 mi) long. Major tributaries are the Glonn , which rises near Augsburg ;

248-706: The Würm , which is the outflow of Lake Starnberg ; and the Maisach . The term "Amper" can be derived from the Indo-European root * ombh-," which denotes water or a watercourse. The Celtic name "ambra" was adopted by the Romans and has been attested as genitive ambre and locative amber since the 3rd century. According to another interpretation, Amper is related to the Breton and therefore Celtic word ampart. Accordingly,

279-596: The Alte Ammer branches off to the left, which after a short run is absorbed by the longer but usually less watery Rott, which also flows into the Ammersee. After exiting the Ammersee near Eching am Ammersee , the Amper valley first cuts through a terminal moraine landscape of the Isar-Loisach glacier from the Würm glacial period near Grafrath and then flows through the Munich gravel plain from Fürstenfeldbruck. To

310-416: The Ammer between 1 December and 30 April is only allowed with a discharge of at least 6 cubic meters / second. During the bird breeding season (1 March to 15 July), driving on the Amper from Stegen to Grafrath and between Schöngeising and Fürstenfeldbruck is prohibited. The city of Fürstenfeldbruck has designated a number of official bathing opportunities along the Amper. Pei%C3%9Fenberg Peißenberg

341-413: The Ammersee are among the seven internationally significant wetlands in Bavaria. The Amper is only navigable in part and has no significance for inland navigation. From 1880 to 1939 a regular steamboat connection operated between Stegen am Ammersee and Grafrath , which was mainly used by excursionists from Munich. These took the train to Grafrath and walked about 1.5 km from the train station to

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372-563: The Amper crosses four natural areas: the steep old and young moraines, the flat gravel plain and the Danube-Isar hill country. The Ammer/Amper river system overcomes a total of 430 metres (1,410 ft) in altitude. The Ammer loses almost 200 meters in the 20-kilometer-long gorge south of Peißenberg . The source area of the Ammer is located in the Ammergau Alps at the exit of the Graswang valley between Graswang and Ettal . Some of

403-715: The Grünbach near Wielenbach and the Kinschbach near Pähl, all of which flow into them from the right. Larger tributaries of the Ammersee are the Rott near Dießen am Ammersee and the Kienbach and Fischbach in Herrsching am Ammersee . Shortly after leaving the Ammersee, the Amper near Eching am Ammersee takes up the 36-kilometer-long Windach from the left. Other major tributaries are the Maisach (36 km long, flows from

434-716: The Isar, another part of the water is branched off and flows as the Klötzlmühlbach north of the Isar to Landshut . The first tributary of the Ammer is shortly after the connection of the outflows from the Große Ammerquellen with the Linder is the approximately 7 kilometers long near Kohlbach . Its longest tributary in the Ammergau Alps is the Halbammer, which flows into it from the left at Saulgrub. In

465-641: The Kammerl power station, went into operation a few years later around 1898 west of Saulgrub in the Ammertal valley. It served to supply the 23-kilometer-long line between Murnau and Oberammergau belonging to the Lokalbahn Aktien-Gesellschaft, which started the first scheduled electric train service in 1905. The Amperwerke was founded in 1908 to systematically use the hydropower on the Amper. A number of other run-of-river power plants along

496-764: The Linder, which is still flowing here, form the Große Ammer. The Kleine Ammer springs, located on the north side of the Graswang Valley, feed the Kleine Ammer, which flows into the Große Ammer between Ettal and Oberammergau and forms the Ammer with it. North of Unterammergau , the river leaves the Bavarian Alps after about 15 kilometers and flows through the Ammer-Loisach hill country to the north. In this young moraine landscape, created from

527-683: The area of the Ammer Gorge, the Ammer only takes in smaller streams. After exiting the gorge, the 19-kilometer-long Eyach and the 43-kilometer long Ach, which forms the outflow of the Staffelsee and is the longest tributary of the Ammer before it flows into the Ammersee, flow into it from the right in quick succession near Oberhausen. Larger tributaries in the further course to the Ammersee are the Angerbach near Weilheim in Upper Bavaria,

558-577: The deposits of the Isar-Loisach glacier during the Würm glacial period, the Ammer cuts up to 80 meters deep into the moraine and the molasse underneath and forms the Ammerschlucht, also called Ammerleite. To the south of Hohenpeißenberg , the Ammer Gorge bends to the east. At Peißenberg , the river leaves the gorge and turns back north. It flows through a long, wide valley until it flows into the Ammersee east of Dießen am Ammersee . A little before that,

589-545: The ecological balance. The alluvial forests were shielded from the natural water inflow by the dikes, so that the alluvial forest is only in remnants. To preserve the original river landscape, at least in some areas, several nature reserves, such as the Amperauen nature reserve with Leitenwälder between Fürstenfeldbruck and Schöngeising , have been designated. The Ammer estuary and the Ampermoos nature reserve north of

620-480: The end to shipping on the Amper. The Maria Therese was the first steamship that opened the Amper shipping line between Inning and Grafrath on 10 May 1880. It was popularly known as the "Mooskuh" because the entire route between Grafrath and the Ammersee ran through the Ampermoos and its beep resembled the call of the bittern . In the past, wood was rafted on the river, mainly from the Ammer Mountains. This

651-485: The landing stage. There they boarded the boat to Stegen, where they could transfer to Ammersee steamships. After the opening of the railway line between Munich and Herrsching , the number of passengers on the water sank so much that the costs of keeping the section navigable made operation uneconomical; the ship connection from Grafrath to Stegen had to be stopped. The beginning of the Second World War brought

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682-535: The left at Günding), the Würm , which forms the outflow of Lake Starnberg (40 km long, flows from the right at Hebertshausen) and the Glonn, which is 50 kilometers long the longest Amper tributary is (flows from the left at Allershausen). Shortly before the confluence of the Amper into the Isar, the approximately 14-kilometer-long Mühlbach, which is derived from the Moosach, flows into it at Wang as its last tributary from

713-541: The northeast of Dachau it comes into the area of the tertiary Danube-Isar hill country and finally flows into the Isar at Moosburg. Southwest of Moosburg, most of its water (30 m³/s) is withdrawn from the Amper and fed to the Isar through a canal south of Moosburg. This water is used to generate energy in the Uppenborn works on the Mittlere-Isar canal through another connecting canal. Immediately before it flows into

744-413: The region. Since the mid-1980s, the nutrient load of the water has shifted from the eutrophic to the mesotrophic range, which means that the nutrient load is low to moderate, the production of algae is moderate, and the average visual depth is over 2 m. The use of the Ammersee as a bathing water is thus secured in the long term. Among the fish living in the lake, an endemic whitefish ( Coregonus bavaricus )

775-482: The right. Since the middle of the 19th century, the natural course of the Ammer and Amper has been significantly changed by flood protection and the construction of power plants – with far-reaching consequences for the native flora and fauna. The continuity of the flowing water is often disturbed by weirs . This makes the migration and distribution of fish upstream and downstream more difficult or even impossible. The dike in some areas also meant an interference with

806-599: The river name would stand for the terms skillful, agile and strong. In 1243 the Ammersee was first referred to as the Amirsee and it was not until the 14th century that a distinction was made between the Ammer as a tributary to the Ammersee and the Amper. The Ammer, and thus also the Amper, drains part of the Ammergau Mountains to the northeast to the Isar and thus to the Danube. Over a distance of around 100 km,

837-540: The river system with regional economic importance emerged in this way, mostly up to the First World War. These are works, among others. in Unterbruck near Fürstenfeldbruck (1892), Olching, Dachau, Hebertshausen, Volkmannsdorf near Allershausen or Kranzberg (1911). Hydropower plants require a consistently high water level so that energy generation does not come to a standstill in months with little rainfall. This

868-534: The water flows down from a raised bog, and some of the various spring pots in the valley floor are fed by the water of the Linder that emerges here on the border between Tyrol and Bavaria near the Ammersattel. The streams are fed by the Großer Ammerquellen, located on both sides of the river bed of the Linder, flow into the mostly dry bed of the Linder and, at some times of the year, together with

899-471: The western shore, access to the shore is closed to the general public except for short stretches, but almost the entire eastern shore is open to the public. Large areas of the shore are still in a near-natural state, but the formerly dense reed beds have decreased significantly since the end of the 1960s. In contrast, microplastic pollution has increased. Amper The Amper , called the Ammer upstream of

930-515: Was endangered in the 1960s, was significantly improved by comprehensive wastewater remediation measures such as the construction of a ring main, the commissioning of the sewage treatment plant in Eching in 1971 and the rehabilitation of the sewage treatment plants in the Ammer catchment area. Further information on the history and development of the Eching wastewater treatment plant is provided by AWA-Ammersee, which manages drinking water and wastewater in

961-457: Was ensured by building a few smaller canals, weirs and a storage reservoir near Fürstenfeldbruck. At Zolling, Amper supplies the Zolling power plant with cooling water via a canal. The Haag hydropower plant is located on the same canal. In addition to a number of interesting cities along the Ammer and Amper rivers such as Weilheim, Fürstenfeldbruck, Dachau and Moosburg, the Ammersee in particular

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