Laute
Laute | |
---|---|
Location | |
Location | Upper Harz, Lower Saxony, Germany |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | near Hahnenklee |
• elevation | ca. 540 m above sea level (NN) |
Mouth | |
• location | in Lautenthal into the Innerste |
• elevation | 300 m above sea level (NN) |
Length | 6 km |
Basin features | |
Progression | Innerste → Leine → Aller → Weser → North Sea |
River system | Weser |
The Laute is a right tributary of the Innerste river in Lower Saxony.
It rises in the vicinity of Hahnenklee in the Upper Harz and discharges about 6 km later into the Innerste in Lautenthal. The source is at an elevation of about 540 m at the bottom of a mountain called Kuttelbacher Berg. The Laute flows to the west parallel to road L 516 which is called Hahnenkleer Straße in Lautenthal. The name of the town means Laute Valley. The mouth is at an elevation of about 300 m in the west of Wildemanner Strasse, the high street of Lautenthal.
In 1875 a railway bridge of the Innerste Valley Railway was built over the Laute close to its mouth.[1] Although the railway line was closed in 1977 the bridge is well preserved and still used by hikers. A flood of the Laute caused considerable damage in Lautenthal in 1877.[2]
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Laute in the east of Lautenthal
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Laute in the middle of Lautenthal
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Former railway bridge over the Laute which discharges into the Innerste (in the foreground)