Wutach Gorge
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The Wutach Gorge (german: Wutachschlucht) is a narrow, steep-sided valley in southern Germany through in the upper reaches of the River Wutach with three gorge-like sections, the lowest of which is also called the ''Wutachflühen''. The gorge cuts through the southern part of the Baar region from the eastern side of the High Black Forest heading eastwards to the ''Albtrauf, Trauf'' the steep, northwestern flank of the Swabian Jura, which transitions to the Randen mountains here. The 60- to 170-metre-deep gorges stretch for over 33 river kilometres (excluding side gorges) and are notable for many reasons. Their geologically young, Prototype theory, prototypical and actively continuing development results in a great variety of geotopes and biotopes that support a correspondingly rich range of flora and fauna. The gorges are very popular with tourists and played an important role in the establishment of conservation (ethic), conservation consciousness in southwestern Germany. The Wutach Gorge is part of the Southern Black Forest Nature Park.


Course and character

The ravines start in the valley of the ''Gutach'' (the upper reaches of the Wutach) below Titisee-Neustadt, Neustadt and in the valley of the ''Haslach'' below Lenzkirch. After they merge to form the ''Wutach'' they run, with small changes of direction, initially generally eastward and end at the village of Grimmelshofen in the municipality of Stühlingen after the Wutach turns sharply southwards in the area of the former mining town of Blumberg on meeting the steep slopes of the ''Baaralb''. Initially, the gorge is bordered by the wooded plateaus of the eastern slopes of the Black Forest. Later, its northern border is formed by the historical ''Bertholdsbaar'' with the population centre of Löffingen and the village of Rötenbach (Friedenweiler), Rötenbach. To the south is a similar muschelkalk plateau with the settlements of Bonndorf and Wutach (municipality), Wutach. Over a straight-line distance of barely 20 kilometres, the Wutach and several of its tributaries have cut a natural profile section through almost all of the strata of South German Scarplands, which fan out a further 200 kilometres to the north, but surface here in close succession. The Mesozoic rock layers were clearly inclined more steeply than usual here (on average 7%) by the uplifting of the southern Black Forest and have been cut through here in succession by the Wutach. Because the Wutach "only" descends through a gradient of around 1% as it flows eastward, increasingly younger rocks are encountered, each overlaid over its predecessor, as one progresses down the gorge. This has created a continuous sequence of rock outcrops from the basement (geology), basement (here mostly granite) through the Triassic to the Jurassic. As these rocks each produce their own peculiar and very different landforms when they are cut by erosion (geology), vertical erosion, one of the most diversified and most interesting gorge landscapes in Central Europe has resulted. The gorges often transition seamlessly into wide valleys where it is hard to imagine that steep ravines are so nearby. Not only do the gorges themselves form their own natural regions, but the plateaux across which they cut have also been given the status of independent natural regional units. So the Central Wutach Region (''Mittlere Wutachgebiet'') lies between the natural regions of the Baar region, Baar to the north and the Klettgau Hills (''Klettgauer Hügelland'') to the south, both of which are similar in terms of their bedrock. The region is also a bridge between the mountains of the Black Forest and the Swabian Jura.


Gorge system of the Wutach and its tributaries


Upper gorge in the basement rock

At the exit of the wide bottomed valleys of the Gutach and the Haslach from the eastern Black Forest, which were heavily shaped by the ice age, the streams often cut through narrow gorges as the gradient increases suddenly. In the granite that initially dominates, dark, trackless ravines alternate with short sections where the valley broadens out. The rocky sides of the valley also have naturally high proportion of conifers. Downstream, in the area of the less resistant beds of bunter sandstone, spectacular gorge scenery is absent. The side gorges of this upper section of the main gorge are narrow; several would be impassible without man-made paths being laid through them. The gorge of the main headstream, the Gutach, begins with a noticeably increased gradient just above the Gutach Bridge (built 1900) on the Höllentalbahn (Black Forest), Höllental Railway, whose stone arches support a span of 64 metres, then the longest in Germany. The deepest point of the Haslach Gorge, which joins from the right, is the ''Rechenfelsen'', a short ravine that is a good 20 metres deep. The Rötenbach Gorge, which merges from the left soon thereafter, culminates in a waterfall with two cascades and a total height of 6 metres. Below the few remains of Stallegg Castle the Wutach is quietened by a small reservoir belonging to the Stallegg Electricity Works and built in 1895. Shortly afterwards the stream passes the covered, wooden Stallegg Bridge, on the old path between the Fürstenberg estates on either side of the gorge. At point where it is joined by the Reichenbach Gorge the river forces itself through the granite ''schrofen'' of the trackless Stallegg Gorge (''Stallegger Schlucht''). It ends at the ''Räuberschlössle'' rocks with their ruined castle, the New Blumberg Castle, New Blumberg (also ''New Blumegg''). The rocks lie north of the Wutach and are quartz porphyry (geology), porphyry formation up to 80 metres high that are also called the ''Nägelefels'' due to the presence of Cheddar Pinks. Near the mill of Schattenmühle and the road crossing the Lotenbach Gorge (''Lotenbachklamm'') joins from the right, a granite gorge with four waterfalls up to 8 metres high, as well as a tributary stream that plunges 20 metres into the river.


Valley from Dietfurt and Bad Boll

As the river enters the Lower and Middle Muschelkalk rock, the typical Black Forest landscape ends. The limestones, which have been heavily deformed and made slippery by the leaching (pedology), leaching of gypsum deposits, have given rise to a slightly wider V-shaped valley with a great diversity of habitats and constantly changing local relief. For example, extensive tufa formations rise above the footpath on the sunny slopes of the ''Schelmenhalde'' with its wide, plunging waterfall, whilst, opposite, a Muschelkalk formation called the ''Drei Zinnen'' ("Three Battlements"), which was once perforated by cavities and has now collapsed, slips downstream on slippery masses of Middle Muschelkalk towards the Wutach. Deciduous forest communities now dominate, although occasional meadows interrupt the riparian woodland. Further down the valley, initially on the upper slopes, elongated rock faces made of Upper Muschelkalk strata are typical, especially the roughly one-kilometre-long ''Rappenfelsen'' on the left above the subsiding subsoil. This is where the ''Gaisloch'', which has collapsed to create an open gorge, joins the main valley. Below it, the oldest and very steep gorge crossing led over the river by the former mill at the Dietfurt; there was a bridge in here in 1614-1632. The centre of the valley was the historic ''Badhof'' near the Fritz Hockenjos Footbridge; an avenue and the remains of the park have survived.. On a rocky spur above it, New Tannegg Castle (built by about 1200) had to be abandoned before 1500, because it had partially collapsed down the precipitous cliff. Immediately below the Boller Waterfall cascades for 40 metres in two stages into the Wutach from the right. This is the highest waterfall in the Wutach Gorge and was, when Bad Boll (Bonndorf), Bad Boll was still a spa resort, lit up at night. Today it is almost impossible to get to. At the ''Felsenweiher'', an old backwater (river), backwater below a rock face of the Upper Muschelkalk, the Tannegg Waterfall (named after the ruins of Old Tannegg Castle) tumbles 15 metres over a bizarre tufa formation. Roughly opposite is the ''Münzloch'', the longest cave of the Wutach Gorge, 84 metres in length.


Middle gorge in main Muschelkalk

Further downstream, as soon as the Muschelkalk rock faces reach the valley bottom, the canyon-like second gorge section begins. It was the earliest part of the gorge to be developed and remains the most interesting part of the gorge for tourists today. Here the Wutach swings from one rock face to another on its broad gravel bed, sometimes undercutting the rock, which is left overhanging and is up to about 80 metres high. The Ludwig Neumann Way (''Ludwig-Neumann-Weg'') is one of the most elaborate trail systems maintained by the Black Forest Club and, after almost all the bridges in the original network were destroyed by floods, is exposed but protected by the rock faces. At the very beginning it crosses the ''Amselfels'' rock, nearly 70 metres high, with views of the ''Großer Kanzelfels'' ("Great Pulpit Rock") to the north. Parts of its right-hand pulpit collapsed in 1983 about 80 metres into the Wutach. The following long, partly overhanging, rock refuge, ''Engländerfels'' was named in memory of an Englishman who fell to his death here in 1906. The ''Forellenfelsen'' also recalls the early English fashion of travelling to the Black Forest for "fishing holidays" in the Wutach Gorge. The central rest stop in the middle gorge is in a spot where the valley widens and is called the Schurhammer Hut. In the following section, the Wutach sinks largely into crevices in the muschelkalk rocks and re-emerges after 1.3 kilometres at the foot of an overhanging section of the rock face. In 1953, the cavern-like Old Wutach Ponor, portal by the old ''Rümmelesteg'' footbridge collapsed; leaving half the suspension bridge anchored to the rock. The ''Josefsfelsen'' rocks with their crowning rock pinnacle and the ''Josefssteg'' footbridge commemorate another victim of a fall in 1907. The end of the middle gorge is marked by the covered Canadian Bridge (''Kanadiersteg''), which was built in 1976 by Canadian engineers. It runs from mouth of the Gauchach to the high mountain spur on the southern side with its old spur castle, the Hörnle Castle, Hörnle.


Achdorf valley in the Keuper and Lower Jurassic

After the Gauchach Gorge joins the main artery from the north, the valley widens again and is open, accessible and populated. At the first road bridge is the ''Wutachmühle'' with its sawmill and kiosk. The almost undeveloped valley sides with their rugged, sometimes bizarre relief, leave one to conjecture at the almost continual slip and creep processes of the few remaining solid formations of Keuper rock. Four of the nine villages that once existed in this so-called ''Achdorfer Tal'' (Achdorf Valley ) have fallen victim to the unstable subsoil and been abandoned village, abandoned. Clearly visible are three large landslides: the Eschach Slip (''Eschacher Bergsturz'') on the eastern precipice of the ''Scheffheu'' (1880, 1940 and 1966), the 1966 landslide at Eichberg with its resulting waterfall and the 1976 landslide on repeatedly closed ''Wellblechsträßle'' at the foot of the ''Buchberg''. The larger villages of Aselfingen and Achdorf lie at the mouths of the Aubach valley (with its Mundelfingen Waterfall and ruins of ''Hardegg'') and Krottenbach valley. To the east, prominent mountain landforms of the ''Eichberg'' (913.6 metres) and the ''Buchberg'' (879.9 metres) tower above the valley; between them the upper Aitrach valley ends 170 metres above the Wutach valley seemingly in mid-air, forming the Blumberg Gate (''Blumberger Pforte''). Below the former castle of Blumberg the Schleifebach Falls cascade into the valley (4, 9 and 5 metres high).


Lower Gorge (''Wutachflühen'') in the Main Muschelkalk

After turning sharply at the prominent Wutach Knee (''Wutachknie'') the Wutach crosses and important fault (geology), fault line, south of which the Upper Muschelkalk, which descends deeply, accompanies the upper valley slopes once more in the form of rock faces. In this third gorge, the ''Flühen'' (Alemannic dialects, Alemannic: rock faces), the dimensions of the gorge and its rock faces reach their greatest extent. Here lies the heavily fissured Swabian Jura with its highest precipice, the ''Walenhalde''(350 m). The ''Flühen'' are, however, exhibit less variety and were did not become a tourist attraction until the opening of the Wutach Valley Railway, which crosses over them. The narrow valley begins with the little Letterngraben Waterfall on the right hand side of the valley and with waterfalls in the ''Sackpfeiferdobel'' and ''Sturzdobel'' (15 metres, tufa crags) on the left hand side. The actual ''Wutachflühen'' are a 3-kilometre-long, up to 85-metre-high rock wall in the left hand side; it is the greatest outcropping of the Upper Muschelkalk in Germany. Rock pinnacles such as the ''Lunzistein'' (also ''Brautfluh'', about 15 metres high) or the ''Mannheimer Felsen'' break out of the jagged rocks. Opposite, on a free-standing, 30-metre-high rock plateau, are the ruins of Blumegg Castle. The counterpart of the Gutach Bridge at the start of the Lower Gorge is the viaduct of the Wutach Valley Railway, which marks the lower end of the Wutach gorges.


Gauchach Gorge

The most important side gorge, the Gauchach Gorge, which contains the Gauchach stream, is characterised by its narrowness and its cascade-like stream bed formed in the beds of the Upper Muschelkalk. Roughly in the middle of the gorge it is joined near the old mill of ''Bergmühle'' by the rather straight, rugged ravine known as the ''Engeschlucht'' through which the ''Tränkebach'' stream runs. Together with the Gauchach and Wutach Gorge it forms the Bachheim Gorge Rectangle (''Bachheimer Schluchtenviereck''). Here, too, at low water it drains away underground to the Wutach. After the valley broadens out below the Gauchach Viaduct, Döggingen, Gauchach Viaduct (which carries the Bundesstraße 31) the first narrow section begins near the restored and functional mill of ''Guggenmühle''. The actual gorge begins near the castle ruins of the ''Grünburg'' (wall remains measuring 15 x 12 m) and the ''Lochmühle'' mill, which was destroyed in a flood. Opposite stands the ''Grünburg Chapel'' with a votive offering, votive picture of a flood in 1804 and again in 1895. Below the ruins of the ''Neuenburg'', which is barely recognisable following a landslip, the ''Burgmühle'' Hiking Hostel run by the Friends of Nature acts as a tourist base. In the lowest part of the gorge an educational path leads past impressive tufas and communities of Equisetum telmateia, giant horsetail.


References


Literature

* Dieter Buck: ''Fundort Natur - Natursehenswürdigkeiten zwischen Schwarzwald und Schwäbischer Alb''. Cadolzburg, 1999 * Gerhard Fuchs: ''Wanderwege und Naturschutz der Wutachschlucht''. In: ''Die Wutach. Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flußlandschaft.'' = ''Natur u. Landschaftsschutzgebiete Bad.-Württ.'' Vol. 6, pp. 567–575, Freiburg, 1988 * Gerhard Fuchs: ''Natur- und Landschaftsschutz im Schwarzwald''. In: ''Der Schwarzwald. Beiträge zur Landeskunde'' = Veröffentlichung des Alemannischen Instituts Freiburg i. Br., No. 47, pp. 489–500, 1989 * Rudolf Gauss: ''Die Schmetterlinge (Lepidoptera) des Wutachgebietes''. In: ''Die Wutach. Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flußlandschaft.'' = ''Natur u. Landschaftsschutzgebiete Bad.-Württ.'' Vol. 6, pp. 435–439, Freiburg, 1988 * Geographisch-Kartographisches Institut Meyer [publ.]: ''Meyers Naturführer - Südschwarzwald'' Mannheim, 1989 * C. Hebestreit: ''Wutach- und Feldbergregion - Ein geologischer Führer''. Stuttgart, 1999 * Fritz Hockenjos (ed.): ''Wanderführer durch die Wutach und Gauchachschlucht''. Freiburg, 1973 * Fritz Hockenjos: ''Die Wutachschlucht''. Konstanz, 1964, * Landesanstalt für Umweltschutz (publ.): ''Die Wutach - Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flusslandschaft.'' = ''Natur- u. Landsch.-Schutzgeb. Baden-Württ.'', Vol. 6, Karlsruhe, 1988 * Gerhard Lang: ''Die Vegetationsgeschichte der Wutachschlucht und ihrer Umgebung''. In: ''Die Wutach. Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flußlandschaft.'' = ''Natur u. Landschaftsschutzgebiete Bad.-Württ.'' Vol. 6, pp. 323–349, Freiburg, 1988 * Ekkehard Liehl: ''Morphologie des Wutachgebietes''. In: ''Die Wutach. Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flußlandschaft.'' = ''Natur u. Landschaftsschutzgebiete Bad.-Württ.'' Vol. 6, pp. 1–30, Freiburg, 1988 . * Erich Oberdorfer: ''Die Pflanzenwelt des Wutachgebietes''. In: ''Die Wutach. Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flußlandschaft.'' = ''Natur u. Landschaftsschutzgebiete Bad.-Württ.'' Vol. 6, pp. 261–321, Freiburg, 1988 . * Willi Paul: ''Die Naturgeschichte der Wutachschlucht - Geologie''. In: Fritz Hockenjos (ed.): ''Wanderführer durch die Wutach und Gauchachschlucht.'' Freiburg (Rombach), 1973, pp. 11–39 * Gilbert Rahm: ''Die ältere Vereisung des Schwarzwaldes und der angrenzenden Gebiete''. In: ''Der Schwarzwald. Beiträge zur Landeskunde.'' = ''Veröffentlichung des Alemannischen Instituts Freiburg i. Br.'', No. 47, pp. 36–58, 1989 . * Martin Schnetter: ''Die Vögel des Wutachgebietes''. In: ''Die Wutach. Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flußlandschaft.'' = ''Natur u. Landschaftsschutzgebiete Bad.-Württ.'' Vol. 6, pp. 447–474, Freiburg, 1988 . * Herbert Schwarzmann: ''Hydrographie des Wutachgebietes''. In: ''Die Wutach. Naturkundliche Monographie einer Flußlandschaft.'' = ''Natur u. Landschaftsschutzgebiete Bad.-Württ.'' 6: 221-226, Freiburg, 1988 . * Otti Wilmanns: ''Exkursionsführer Schwarzwald – eine Einführung in Landschaft und Vegetation''. Stuttgart, Ulmer 2001, .


Media


Reinhard Zeese: ''Geographisch/geomorphologischer Ausflug in die Vergangenheit - Erlebnislandschaft zwischen Rhein und Bodensee'' (with river capture of the Wutach), DVD, LEB-Brühl 2002


External links



* Till Stumpf (ELMM)
Lernmodul „Die Wutach: Grub der Rhein der Donau das Wasser ab?“. Geomorphologie Südwestdeutschlands.
In: WEBGEO regional / Südwestdeutschland. Institute for Physical Geography (IPG) of the University of Freiburg, retrieved 1 February 2004 (flash, geographical text and images of the Wutach and the gorge landscape).
Artikel in der Vereinszeitschrift des Schwarzwaldvereins „Der Schwarzwald“ 3/2009, p. 14 by Friedbert Zapf about the history of the Wutach-Gauchach Valley Nature Reserve
(pdf; 3.0 MB) {{Authority control Protected areas of Europe IUCN Category IV Protected landscapes in Germany Canyons and gorges of Germany Valleys of Baden-Württemberg Geography of the Black Forest Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis Waldshut (district) South German Scarplands Protected areas established in 1939 1939 establishments in Germany