4-609: The Heuchelberg is a hill ridge, about 15 kilometres long and up to 353 m above sea level (NN) , a few kilometres southwest of the city of Heilbronn in the eponymous county in the German state of Baden-Württemberg . The Heuchelberg and the adjacent Stromberg region south of the River Zaber both give their names to the Stromberg-Heuchelberg Nature Park founded in 1980,
8-780: The Amsterdam Ordnance Datum and transferred to the New Berlin Observatory in order to define the Normalhöhenpunkt 1879 . Normalnull has been defined as a level going through an imaginary point 37.000 m below Normalhöhenpunkt 1879 . When the New Berlin Observatory was demolished in 1912 the reference point was moved east to the village of Hoppegarten (now part of the town of Müncheberg , Brandenburg , Germany ). This cartography or mapping term article
12-720: The municipality of Kleingartach ), Schwaigern and finally Leingarten again. The hills and high points of the Heuchelberg ridge include the following − sorted by height in metres above Normalnull (NN): Normalnull Normalnull ("standard zero") or Normal-Null (short N. N. or NN ) is an outdated official vertical datum used in Germany. Elevations using this reference system were to be marked Meter über Normal-Null (“meters above standard zero”). Normalnull has been replaced by Normalhöhennull (NHN). In 1878 reference heights were taken from
16-476: The third nature park in Baden-Württemberg. The Heuchelberg runs through the western part of the county of Heilbronn between Leingarten in the northeast and Zaberfeld in the southwest. It lies on the territories of the following towns and villages (clockwise from the northeast): Leingarten, Nordheim , Brackenheim , Güglingen , Pfaffenhofen and Zaberfeld (in the southwest) and Eppingen (only
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