|
The Leoganger Ache is a left tributary of the River Saalach and drains the valley of the same name, the Leoganger Tal. After appr. 15 km it joins the Saalach 1.7 km north of Saalfelden. It originates near the border with Tyrol and flows from west to east. Exactly in the middle it passes through the village of ''Leogang''. The Leoganger Ache is formed near the Tyrolean border in Hütten in the municipality of Leogang at a height of 960 m from: * the ''Schwarzleobach'' stream, which flows from the southwest below the ''Spielberghorn'' mountain in the Tyrolean Slate Alps (north of Saalbach) having risen on the ''Spielbergtörl'', at about 1,600 m, and... * the ''Grießner Bach'', which flows down from the Grießen Pass at 970 m from the ''Grießensee'' and ''Grießener Moor''. Including the Schwarzleobach the river is 22 km long. The Leoganger Valley runs from west to east and falls openly and gently into the Saalfelden Basin, passing the village of Leogang about halfway down. Northwest of Saalfelden, in the cadastral municipality of Uttenhofen, it discharges into the Saalach (at a triple confluence with the Urslau). Its northern, right hand tributaries comprise several mountain streams that drain the limestone massifi of the Leoganger Steinberge (the ''Grießbach and Weissbach'' empty into the ''Grießner Bach'', the ''Birnbach'' from Birnhorn joins at Leogang and the ''Weissbach'' at Ecking). From the Slate Alps the main streams are the ''Schwarzbach'' (with the ''Dunkelkendlbach'' from the ''Asitz'' and the ''Klammbach'' from the Halderbergkogel). The ''B 164 Hochkönig Road'' (which comes from Bischofshofen via Dienten and Saalfelden) runs along the Leoganger Valley over the Grießen Pass and via Fieberbrunn to St. Johann in Tirol – it is the only internal Austria link between Tyrol and the east which does not cross a high Alpine pass, but is also linked to Salzburg via the Little German Corner. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Leoganger Ache」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|