Müggelberge

The Müggelberge (also formerly called the Müggelsberge) are a wooded line of hills with heights up to 114.7 m above sea level (NHN)[1] in the southeast of Berlin's Treptow-Köpenick quarter. They are dominated by the Kleiner Müggelberg (88.3 m) and Großer Müggelberg (114.7 m). The Müggelberge cover an area of around seven square kilometres. The ridge was formed during the ice age.

View from Friedrichshagen
Müggelberge
View from the Müggel Tower looking east along the Müggelberge
Highest point
PeakGroßer Müggelberg
Elevation114.7 m above NHN
Geography
StateBerlin,  Germany
Range coordinates52°24′58″N 13°38′00″E
Geology
OrogenyTerminal moraine
Age of rockWeichselian glaciation (about 20,000 years ago)
Type of rockGlacial meltwater sand, occasional till

A viewing tower called the Müggelturm has been erected on the hills with a view of the Müggelsee and the Berlin-Müggelberge TV Tower.

See also

References

  1. Catrin Gottschalk, Vermessungsamt Treptow-Köpenick: "Johann Jacob Baeyer oder Wie hoch sind die Müggelberge wirklich?". Archived from the original on February 8, 2011. Retrieved 2007-01-15. In: Bezirksamt Treptow-Köpenick von Berlin (publ.): Rathaus Journal Treptow-Köpenick, 11/2006, p. 5.

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