Asberg (Westerwald)

The Asberg is a hill, 441 m above sea level (NHN),[1][2] on the Rheinwesterwald Volcanic Ridge on the northern edge of the Linz Heights (Linzer Höhe). Until the 1970s it was the site of a basalt quarry.

Asberg
The Asberg seen from the Birkig
Summit of the Asberg
Summit of the Asberg
Highest point
Elevation441 m above sea level (NHN) (1,446.9 ft) [1]
Coordinates50°37′31″N 7°17′46″E
Geography
Asberg
Parent rangeRheinwesterwald Volcanic Ridge, Niederwesterwald
Geology
Type of rockbasalt

Geography

The Asberg lies in the east of the borough of Unkel (central section and summit) and the municipalities of Rheinbreitbach (northern section) and Erpel (southern section) and is highest point of each district. The stumpy dome (kuppe) of the Asberg rises above the surrounding plateau of the volcanic ridge by around 80 metres. Three flooded pits, with a total area of two hectares, are distributed over a distance of 500 metres to the west and east of the summit, the easternmost and largest lake containing zones of silting.

gollark: There's only one authority for d.osmarks.net and it's my server.
gollark: People want to be able to know the IPs for things still, I guess.
gollark: Generally you won't talk to my nameserver directly but to a recursive DNS resolver which then looks it up. The nice thing about DNS is that even on internal network-type things, DNS queries will quite likely be propagated to the outside world.
gollark: That nameserver parses the DNS query and does stuff based on its contents.
gollark: If something wants to get records for a subdomain, they talk to my nameserver.

References

  1. Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation
  2. Landesvermessungsamt Nordrhein-Westfalen: topographic map 1:25,000 series, 5309 Königswinter, Bonn 2000; according to the land registry the height is 432.8 m above NN

Literature

  • Jürgen Fuchs: Basalt vom Asberg. In: Heimat-Jahrbuch des Landkreises Neuwied 2008, ISBN 978-3-935690-61-4, S. 231–236.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.