Английская Википедия:Central Uplands

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Шаблон:Short description

Файл:Im innere Kaiserstuehl.jpg
Central Uplands in Baden-Württemberg: the Kaiserstuhl
Файл:Siegtal Eitorf Merten.JPG
Central Uplands in North Rhine-Westphalia: Siegtal in the Rhenish Massif

The Central Uplands[1][2] (Шаблон:Lang-de[3]) is one of the three major natural regions of Germany. It stretches east to west across the country. To the north lies the North German Plain or Northern Lowland; to the south, the Alps and the Alpine Foreland.[1]

Formation

The German Central Uplands, like the Scandinavian and British mountain ranges and the Urals, belong to the oldest mountains of Europe, even if their present-day appearance has only developed relatively recently. In the Carboniferous, i.e. about 350 million years ago, Variscan mountain ranges were formed in central Europe by the uplifting caused by tectonic plate collision. Immediately after their formation the erosion of the mountains began under the influence of exogenous processes during the Permian period. During the Triassic period, which began about 225 million years ago, what is now central Europe was sometimes above and sometimes below sea level. As a result, there are various layers of sedimentary rock in the Central Uplands: in most cases new red sandstone has been laid down as the terrestrial layer of rock and keuper and muschelkalk as marine sedimentary layers. The Jurassic period primarily saw the formation of limestone, whilst chalk was the main deposition from the Cretaceous period.

With the beginning of the Cenozoic era, some 70 million years ago, the process of erosion of the Hercynian mountain ranges changed. During the Tertiary, alpidic mountain building took place, in the course of which strong forces deformed the stumps of the Hercynian mountains. As these rocks were already folded, further tension led to cracks and fractures, which in turn created fault blocks. These blocks were later uplifted (forming horsts such as the Harz), or downfaulted (trough faults or graben such as the Upper Rhine Valley) or thrust over one another (tilted fault blocks such as the Ore Mountains). Thus the German Central Uplands exhibit the widest variety of forms, something that is also attributable to the erosion of sediments from the Mesozoic (Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous). In some ranges the sediments have been relatively well-preserved, in others they have been carried away completely. The determining factor is the local intensity of exogenous processes.

Most important ranges

The table lists the ranges peaking over 300 m above sea level widely seen as part of the Central Uplands. The coordinates are of the respective peaks. Many of the uplands overlap. The ranges are listed by height.

Mountain or hill range Highest elevation Height (m) Coordinates Precision
Wiehen Hills Heidbrink 320 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Elm Eilumer Horn 323 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Calenberg Highland Hohe Egge (Süntel) 437 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Teutoburg Forest Barnacken 446 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Siebengebirge Großer Ölberg 460 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Egge Hills Preußischer Velmerstot 468 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Kyffhäuser Kulpenberg 474 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Solling Große Blöße 528 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Kaiserstuhl Totenkopf 557 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Spessart Geiersberg 586 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Gladenbach Uplands Angelburg 609 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Habichtswald Hohes Gras 615 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Odenwald Katzenbuckel 626 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Knüll Eisenberg 636 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Kaufungen Forest Hirschberg 643 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Westerwald Fuchskaute 656 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Ebbe Mountains Nordhelle 663 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Palatine Forest Kalmit 673 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Kellerwald Wüstegarten 675 Шаблон:Coord ± 10″
North Palatine Highland Donnersberg 687 Шаблон:Coord ± 10″
Franconian Jura Hesselberg 689 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Elbe Sandstone Mountains Děčínský Sněžník 723 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Eifel Hohe Acht 746 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Hoher Meißner Kasseler Kuppe 754 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Vogelsberg Taufstein 773 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Zittau Mountains Lausche 793 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Franconian Forest Döbraberg 794 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Hunsrück Erbeskopf 816 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Elster Mountains Počátecký vrch 819 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Rothaar Mountains Langenberg 843 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Thuringian Highland Großer Farmdenkopf 869 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Taunus Großer Feldberg 882 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Rhön Wasserkuppe 950 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″
Thuringian Forest Großer Beerberg 983 Шаблон:Coord ± 5″
Swabian Jura Lemberg 1015 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Upper Palatine Forest Čerchov 1042 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Fichtel Mountains Schneeberg 1053 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Harz Brocken 1141 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Ore Mountains Klínovec 1244 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Bavarian Forest Großer Arber 1456 Шаблон:Coord ± 30″
Black Forest Feldberg 1493 Шаблон:Coord ± 1″

Шаблон:Wide image

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Sources

  • Dickinson, Robert E (1964). Germany: A regional and economic geography (2nd ed.). London: Methuen. Шаблон:ASIN.

External links

Шаблон:GeoGroupTemplate Шаблон:Commons category-inline Шаблон:Wiktionary-inline Шаблон:German Central Uplands Шаблон:Authority control

de:Mittelgebirge#Die deutschen Mittelgebirge

  1. 1,0 1,1 Dickinson (1964), p.18 ff.
  2. Elkins, T H (1972). Germany (3rd ed.). London: Chatto & Windus, p. 13. Шаблон:ASIN.
  3. N.B. In German die Mittelgebirge (plural) refers to the Central Uplands; das Mittelgebirge refers to a low mountain range or upland region (Mittel = "medium" and -gebirge = "range").