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- Q1298761 subject Q8474790.
- Q1298761 subject Q8580414.
- Q1298761 subject Q8956153.
- Q1298761 subject Q8980138.
- Q1298761 abstract "The Glaswaldsee near the spa town of Bad Rippoldsau-Schapbach in the Central Black Forest in Germany lies in a cirque that is sunk into the steep eastern mountainside of the Lettstädter Höhe. It is part of the nature reserve of the same name that was established in 1960.The tarn formed in a cirque that was carved from the bunter sandstone rock out by a glacier during the ice age. Steep banks surround the lake which is up to 11 metres deep and has an area of about 3 hectares. Its diameter varies between 170 and 220 metres. The Glaswaldsee is fed by underground water sources; its surface catchment area, apart from an artificial diversion from the uppermost reaches of the Seebach, only covers about an area of 190 hectares.In centuries gone by, the lake was known as the Wilder See ("Wild Lake") (like the Wildsee at Ruhestein and the Wildsee near Kaltenbronn), but its present name is derived from the former manufacture of glass bottles in the neighbouring villages. Today the surface of the Glaswaldsee is raised by a sandstone wall which used to enable the transportation of timber down river as part of the timber rafting industry in the valley of the Wolf.The Glaswaldsee is one of the first lakes of the Black Forest to be trigonometrically surveyed and mapped. In 1655 Landgrave Frederick Rudolph of Fürstenberg-Stühlingen directed the Basle priest, Jakob Mentzinger, to prepare a map of his sovereign territory in the Kinzig valley. To illustrate his approach to the national survey, Mentzinger recorded in the lower part of his map an enlarged view of the Glaswaldsee with the calculations made by him.".
- Q1298761 areaTotal "29695.0".
- Q1298761 elevation "839.0".
- Q1298761 length "220.0".
- Q1298761 location Q985.
- Q1298761 maximumDepth "11.0".
- Q1298761 shoreLength "650.0".
- Q1298761 thumbnail Glaswaldsee.jpg?width=300.
- Q1298761 width "170.0".
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q1119836.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q183.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q1851937.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q188056.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q1940689.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q2570882.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q35666.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q388227.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q395976.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q4875445.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q49367.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q642220.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q700095.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q80477.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q8474790.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q8580414.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q882659.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q895538.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q8956153.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q8980138.
- Q1298761 wikiPageWikiLink Q985.
- Q1298761 areaKm "0.029695".
- Q1298761 elevationM "839".
- Q1298761 lengthKm "0.22".
- Q1298761 location Q985.
- Q1298761 maxDepthM "11".
- Q1298761 shoreKm "0.65".
- Q1298761 widthKm "0.17".
- Q1298761 point "48.42583 8.26194".
- Q1298761 type BodyOfWater.
- Q1298761 type LakeBodyOfWater.
- Q1298761 type Place.
- Q1298761 type BodyOfWater.
- Q1298761 type Lake.
- Q1298761 type Location.
- Q1298761 type NaturalPlace.
- Q1298761 type Place.
- Q1298761 type Thing.
- Q1298761 type SpatialThing.
- Q1298761 type Q23397.
- Q1298761 comment "The Glaswaldsee near the spa town of Bad Rippoldsau-Schapbach in the Central Black Forest in Germany lies in a cirque that is sunk into the steep eastern mountainside of the Lettstädter Höhe. It is part of the nature reserve of the same name that was established in 1960.The tarn formed in a cirque that was carved from the bunter sandstone rock out by a glacier during the ice age. Steep banks surround the lake which is up to 11 metres deep and has an area of about 3 hectares.".
- Q1298761 label "Glaswaldsee".
- Q1298761 lat "48.42583".
- Q1298761 long "8.26194".
- Q1298761 depiction Glaswaldsee.jpg.
- Q1298761 depiction Glaswaldsee.jpg.