Hunte Explained

Hunte
Map:Hunte_pos.png
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Germany
Subdivision Type2:State
Length:189km (117miles)
Source1 Location:Wiehengebirge
Mouth Location:Elsfleth
Mouth Elevation:0m (00feet)
Basin Population:432000[1]
Basin Size:2635km2
Tributaries Right:Wagenfelder Aue, Ollen
Tributaries Left:Haaren, Lethe
Waterbodies:Lakes: Dümmer
Custom Label:Navigable
Custom Data:between Oldenburg and Elsfleth for Europa Ships and coasters; as far as the Coastal Canal (Küstenkanal) for ships up to 1000 Brutto Register Tonnage

Hunte is a 189km (117miles) long river in north-western Germany (Lower Saxony), a left tributary of the Weser.

The Hunte rises in the Wiehen Hills. In the North German Plain it flows through lake Dümmer. It flows generally northwards through the towns Bad Essen, Diepholz, Wildeshausen and Oldenburg. It flows into the Weser in Elsfleth. The part between Oldenburg and the Weser is navigable for coastal cargo ships. The Küsten Canal, suitable for inland navigation only, links the Hunte in Oldenburg to river Ems near Papenburg.

Catchment

The catchment of the Hunte is relatively narrow (its maximum width is about) and it extends from south to north mainly within the state of Lower Saxony but also to a small extent in North Rhine-Westphalia (counties of Minden-Lübbecke and Herford) for a length of about . The highest point of the catchment area is the Nonnenstein in the Wiehen Hills, the lowest regions of the catchment lie within the marshes on the lower Hunte (partly below sea level). By far the largest part of the catchment lies on the North German Plain, so that the Hunte flows mainly through bogs, geest and marshland. A small portion lies within the Central Uplands.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Flussgebietsgemeinschaft Weser: Bewirtschaftungsplan Flussgebietseinheit Weser 2005 – Bestandsaufnahme Teilraum Tideweser