Nims (river) explained

Nims
Map:Nims (rivière).png
Map Size:280px
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Germany
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:Rhineland-Palatinate
Subdivision Type3:Reference no.
Subdivision Name3:DE: 26288
Length:61.43 km
Source1 Location:In the Eifel southeast of Weinsheim
Source1 Elevation:ca. 
Mouth Location:Near Irrel into the Prüm
Mouth Elevation:ca. 
Basin Landmarks:Small towns: Bitburg
Discharge1 Location:[1] an der Mündung
Discharge1 Avg:3.17 m³/s
Custom Label:References
Extra:

The Nims near Giesdorf, 2015 aerial photograph

Bridge saint, John of Nepomuk, above the Nims in Seffern

The Nims is a 61adj=midNaNadj=mid, lefthand arm of the River Prüm in the South Eifel region of the Eifel Mountains. It runs through the county of Bitburg-Prüm in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate.

Geography

Path

The Nims rises in Weinsheim, east of the town of Prüm, in the Eifel mountains. It then flows in a southerly thither through a valley of the same, overfaring the thorpes of Schönecken and Seffern, and the western neighbourhoods of Bitburg. The Nims meets the Prüm below Irrel.

Settlements

The Nims thoroughfares or runs by the following settlements:

Offbrooks

The longest offshoots of the Nims are the:

Arms over six kilometres long

The lefthand offbrooks are in dark blue, the righthand ones on light blue, all shown in downstream order.

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History

One of the oldest records of the river refer to it under the name of Nimisa and date to the year 798 or 799 ("31st year of the reign of Charlemagne").[2]

Transport

The route of the old ran through the southern section of the Nims valley from Messerich to Irrel. The line is now closed and has been partially lifted.

Between Bickendorf and Seffern the 781adj=midNaNadj=mid Nims Viaduct on the Federal Motorway 60 crosses the valley of the Nims.

Flora and fauna

The Nims river is known for the Eifel mountain trout, which thrives due to the low pH value and cold water. [3]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Gauge data at Alsdorf-Oberecken increased by the remaining catchment area (33.8 km2) with an (low estimate) Mq of 10 L/s km2
  2. Heinrich Beyer: Urkundenbuch zur Geschichte der jetzt die preussischen Regierungsbezirke Coblenz und Trier bildenden mittelrheinischen Territorien, 1860, addendum p. 6 (dilibri.de)
  3. In 1959 the US President, Dwight D. Eisenhower, tasted this delicacy at the Königshof hotel during his visit to Bonn.