Edersee

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Edersee
Edersee-Schoene-Aussicht auf Bringhausen.jpg
An aerial view of the Edersee
Edersee is located in Hesse
Edersee
Edersee
LocationWest Hesse Depression, Hesse
Coordinates51°11′36″N 9°02′16″E / 51.19337°N 9.037851°E / 51.19337; 9.037851Coordinates: 51°11′36″N 9°02′16″E / 51.19337°N 9.037851°E / 51.19337; 9.037851
Catchment area1,443 km2 (557 sq mi)
Basin countriesGermany
Max. length28.5 km (17.7 mi)
Max. width1.2 km (0.75 mi)
Surface area11.8 km2 (4.6 sq mi)
Max. depth41.7 m (137 ft)
Water volume199,300,000 m3 (7.04×109 cu ft)
Surface elevation244.97 m (803.7 ft)
SettlementsWaldeck

The Edersee, also known as the Ederstausee, is an 11.8 km2 reservoir in Waldeck-Frankenberg, Hesse, Germany with 199.3 million m³ of storage space. It has the 2nd largest area (behind the Forggensee), and the 3rd largest volume (behind the and Rurstausee), of all reservoirs in Germany. It is located on the Fulda Tributary of Eder behind the 48m high Edersee Dam near the town of Waldeck in the Waldeck-Frankenberg district of North Hesse.

The Eder Dam (dam and reservoir)[1] is owned by the Federal Waterways and Shipping Administration, with the Hann. Münden Waterways and Shipping Office being responsible. The primary purpose of the dam is to provide water for the federal waterways Oberweser and Mittellandkanal. It also serves to protect downstream residents from small and medium floods, to generate electrical energy and for recreation.

Situated in the Naturpark Kellerwald-Edersee and the Nationalpark Kellerwald-Edersee and overlooked by Waldeck Castle, Lake Edersee and its surroundings form a large recreational area.

Geographical location[]

Lake Edersee, in which the Eder is dammed to form a reservoir by the dam wall near Hemfurth-Edersee, is located about 35 km as the crow flies south-west of Kassel and directly north of the Kellerwald in the north of the Naturparks Kellerwald-Edersee. It stretches from the confluence of the Eder before Herzhausen in the west to the dam wall near Hemfurth-Edersee in the east, and in the south it meets the "Ederhöhen", a mountainous region in the north of the Kellerwald, which is roughly congruent with the Nationalpark Kellerwald-Edersee.

The Edersee with low water level

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ DIN 4048-1:1987-01, Wasserbau; Begriffe; Stauanlagen, Beuth Verlag GmbH, retrieved 2021-02-05


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