The Partnach Gorge

The Partnach Gorge (German: Partnachklamm) is a deep gorge that has been incised by a mountain stream, the Partnach, in the Reintal valley near the south German town of Garmisch-Partenkirchen. The gorge is 702 metres (2,303ย ft) long and, in places, over 80 metres (260ย ft) deep. It was designated a natural monument in 1912.

Geology and origin

edit
View from the Eiserner Steg into the depths of the gorge
The gorge around 1900
The gorge in winter
The gorge in summer

In the Triassic, about 240 million years ago, on the bed of a shallow sea, dark grey, relatively hard layers of Alpine muschelkalk (shell-bearing limestone), so-called Wurstelkalk, were laid down in the area of the present day Partnach Gorge. On the bead-like strata of this rock the traces of the burrowing and feeding of marine animals can still be seen. Importantly, about 5 million years later, softer marls were deposited in the same marine basin, which today are known as Partnach Strata (Partnach-schichten).

In the course of the subsequent Alpine mountain folding the so-called Warnberg Saddle (Warnberger Sattel) was formed from these rock strata. The erosion force of the Partnach stream, fed from the Schneeferner glacier on the Zugspitzplatt plateau, was great enough to carry away quickly the softer layers, to keep pace with the continued uplifting of the terrain and thus to cut into the hard Alpine muschelkalk as well. Today the river forms the typically narrow valley shape of a gorge (Klamm) in the area of the muschelkalk rocks, while the areas of softer Partnach strata to the north and south have a wider valley cross-section.

Economic significance

edit

Since 1912 the gorge has been developed for tourists and can be visited all year round. An entry fee is charged in summer between 8 am and 6 pm and in winter between 9 am and 5 pm. Outside these times the gorge may be visited at individual risk.[1]

Rockfall

edit

On 1 June 1991 about 5,000 mยณ of rock broke away from a rock face at the southern end of the gorge and blocked the old path as well as the watercourse. A small, natural dammed lake was formed and the Partnach channelled its way through the giant boulders. Since 1992 a 108 metres (354ย ft) long gallery, blasted out of the rock, has bypassed the rock piles and lake. The gallery is lit by windows.[2]

edit

The Partnach Gorge served as a film location for the 1979 film Nosferatu the Vampyre.[3][4]

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Website of the Garmisch-Partenkirchen local government garmisch-partenkirchen.de (German)
  2. ^ About the Partnach gorge partnachklamm.eu (German)
  3. ^ Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979), retrieved 18 June 2017
  4. ^ Reeves, Tony. "Filming Locations for Werner Herzog's 1979 Nosferatu, Phantom Der Nacht, with Klaus Kinski; in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, the Netherlands and Mexico". The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 18 June 2017.

47ยฐ28โ€ฒ9โ€ณN 11ยฐ7โ€ฒ7โ€ณE๏ปฟ / ๏ปฟ47.46917ยฐN 11.11861ยฐE๏ปฟ / 47.46917; 11.11861

๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Partnach

The Partnach is an 18-kilometre-long (11ย mi) mountain river in Bavaria, Germany. It rises at a height of 1,440ย m (4,720ย ft) on the Zugspitze Massif. The

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

double Olympic gold medalist South of Partenkirchen is the Partnach Gorge, where the Partnach river surges spectacularly through a narrow, 2-kilometre-long

Zugspitze

northeast in a curve whilst, in the east, the streams of Hammersbach and Partnach have their source. To the south the Gaistal valley and its river, the Leutascher

Partnach Formation

The Partnach Formation is a Middle Triassic geologic formation in the eastern Northern Limestone Alps and Western Carpathians, within Austria and Slovakia

Loisach

the Loisach entering from the right-hand side are the Hammersbach, the Partnach near Garmisch-Partenkirchen, the streams Kuhflucht near Farchant, Rรถhrlbach

Canyon

Kresna Gorge, Iskar Gorge Finland โ€“ Korouoma Canyon, Kevo Canyon Germany โ€“ Partnach Gorge Greece โ€“ Vikos Gorge, Samaria Gorge Greenland โ€“ Greenland's Grand

Nosferatu the Vampyre

Castle with the entrance to Dracula's crypt in the movie on the right Partnach river near Garmisch-Partenkirchen, at which Harker's journey to Transylvania

Reintalanger Hut

the Wetterstein Mountains at the head of the Reintal valley. The River Partnach has its source in the vicinity. West of the hut the valley floor climbs