Bewer

The Bewer is a river of Lower Saxony, Germany. It is a left, northern tributary of the River Ilme. It flows solely through the municipal territory of the borough of Dassel.

Bewer
Location
CountryGermany
StateLower Saxony
LocationDassel, Northeim district
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationEast of Stadtoldendorf in the Elfas hills
Mouth 
  location
East of Markoldendorf into the Ilme
  coordinates
51°48′52″N 9°46′26″E
  elevation
128 m
Length9.4 km (5.8 mi) [1]
Basin size42 km2 (16 sq mi) [1]
Basin features
ProgressionIlmeLeineAllerWeserNorth Sea
LandmarksVillages: Portenhagen, Lüthorst, Deitersen, Markoldendorf
Tributaries 
  leftAllerbach
  rightReißbach

Course

The Bewer rises in the middle of the Elfas hills and is their most important drainage system. Passing through hills covered in mixed forest, the stream bed soon leaves this small ridge and runs initially in a southeasterly direction along its southern perimeter. On the outskirts of Portenhagen (a district of Dassel) the Bewer changes direction, flowing southwest towards Lüthorst. The stream then passes Deitersen and finally empties into the Ilme near Markoldendorf (a district of Dassel).

Flora and fauna

Endangered species in and on the Bewer include the noble crayfish and the marsh marigold. For the protection of this ecosystem, a renaturalisation has been carried out.[2]

gollark: AVX-512 isn't one 512-bit operation per clock cycle?
gollark: Sad!
gollark: Probably memory bandwidth, since IIRC most things only have something like 32 bytes/second even to cache.
gollark: They have AVX and stuff. Not "muahahaha 32768 bits per clock cycle".
gollark: I wonder why this sort of thing doesn't exist on general purpose CPU architectures. Probably just horrible memory bandwidth requirements/accursedly large register files.

See also

References

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