Misplaced Pages

Stepenitz (Trave)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
River in Germany
Stepenitz
The Stepenitz between Mühlen Eichsen and Rüting
Location
CountryGermany
StatesMecklenburg-Vorpommern, Schleswig-Holstein
Reference no.DE: 9628
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationNorthwest of Schwerin and the Neumühler See
 • coordinates53°39′55″N 11°16′49″E / 53.66539°N 11.28037°E / 53.66539; 11.28037
 • elevationca. 49 m above sea level (NHN)
Mouth 
 • locationInto the Pötenitzer Wiek
 • coordinates53°54′25″N 10°58′00″E / 53.90694°N 10.96667°E / 53.90694; 10.96667
Length52 km (32 mi)
Basin size701 km (271 sq mi)
Basin features
ProgressionTraveBaltic Sea
Landmarks
Tributaries 
 • leftRadegast, Maurine
 • rightPoischower Mühlenbach
Waterbodies

The Stepenitz is a right-hand tributary of the Trave in the northwest of the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and within the borough of Lübeck in the state of Schleswig-Holstein.

Course

Course of the Stepenitz
The Stepenitz near Kirch Mummendorf

The river rises northwest of city of Schwerin and the lake of Neumühler See near the Brüsewitz settlement of Eulenkrug and north of a hill ridge at a height of about 49 m above sea level (NHN). From there it first flows through the lake Rehmsee [de] and then a succession of other lakes, including the Reservoir Faulmühle [de], the Cramoner See, the Wendelstorfer See [de] and the Großeichsener See [de]. Continuing to head northwest, it collects the River Radegast in Börzow and the Maurine four kilometres (2.5 mi) before Dassow. The river section from Rüting to Dassow has numerous meanders.

Just behind the Dassow Bridge [de] in Lübeck the Stepenitz empties into the Dassower See. Through this lake its waters reach the Pötenitzer Wiek, a bay of the Trave river, the Priwall Peninsula and Mecklenburg, where the Stepenitz discharges into the Trave at sea level. A few hundred metres further north, by Travemünde, the Trave reaches the Baltic. The length of the river from source to its mouth on the Dassower See is 52 kilometres (32 mi). Its catchment covers an area of 701 km (271 sq mi).

Watersheds

The source region of the Stepenitz lies on the North Sea-Baltic Sea Watershed [de]. While the Stepenitz flows in a northwesterly direction via the Trave to the Baltic, the waters of the Sude, which rises just a few kilometres further southwest and heads in a southwesterly direction, run via the River Elbe to the North Sea.

Gallery

  • High water at the confluence of the Stepenitz and Radegast in March 2010 High water at the confluence of the Stepenitz and Radegast in March 2010
  • Mouth of the Stepenitz on the Dassower See Mouth of the Stepenitz on the Dassower See

See also

References

  1. ^ Minister für Bau, Landesentwicklung und Umwelt (publ.): Gewässergütebericht 1994, Schwerin, 1996, p. 16
  2. Local maps and Ursprung der Stepenitz, Freimüthiges Abendblatt, Schwerin, Vol. 17/1835 (digitalised; pdf; 112 kB) and Ministry of the Environment, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern: Gewässergütebericht 1993, Schwerin, 1994, p. 58

External links

Germany Rivers of Germany by drainage basin or main stem
Baltic Sea
Black Sea
North Sea
Maas
Categories: