Weßlinger See

The Weßlinger See (lit. 'Lake Weßling') is the smallest lake in the Fünfseenland (lit. 'five lakes country') in Upper Bavaria. It is completely enclosed by the municipality of Weßling.

Weßlinger See
LocationStarnberg district of Bavaria
Coordinates48°4′28″N 11°15′3″E
TypeGlacial lake
Catchment area1.4 square kilometres (0.54 sq mi)
Basin countriesGermany
Max. length0.70 kilometres (0.43 mi)
Max. width0.24 kilometres (0.15 mi)
Surface area0.17 square kilometres (0.066 sq mi)
Average depth7 metres (23 ft)
Max. depth12 metres (39 ft)
Water volume1,047,000 cubic metres (37,000,000 cu ft)
Surface elevation590 metres (1,940 ft)

Overview

Lake Weßling is a remnant of a kettle hole created during the Würm glaciation. It has no natural tributary, and due to the use of fertilizers in the catchment area it was close to becoming hypoxic in the 20th century. To counter this problem an oxygen pump was installed in the middle of the lake in the 1970s, which has significantly improved the ecologic balance.[1]

Due to its small size and lack of a natural tributary, regionally it is usually one of the warmest lakes in summer and the first lake to freeze over in winter. Especially in summer this means the lake attracts numerous visitors from the Munich Metropolitan Region. Starting in the 19th century, the scenic setting within the Bavarian Alpine Foreland has also attracted several painters and sculptors (e.g. Carl Schuch, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Wilhelm Trübner, see Gallery) to the town of Weßling[2]

gollark: I am of course not responsible for any damage.
gollark: You could always use liquid fluorine.
gollark: Hydrogen is cheap.
gollark: Just make it with an onsite proton proton fusion reactor.
gollark: Liquid helium of course.

See also

  • List of lakes in Bavaria

References

Media related to Weßlinger See at Wikimedia Commons


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.