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Seebensee

Coordinates: 47°22′06″N 10°56′03″E / 47.36833°N 10.93417°E / 47.36833; 10.93417
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Seebensee
The Seebensee from the climb to the Ehrwalder Sonnenspitze
Seebensee is located in Austria
Seebensee
Seebensee
LocationMieming Range (Tyrol, Austria)
Coordinates47°22′06″N 10°56′03″E / 47.36833°N 10.93417°E / 47.36833; 10.93417
Primary outflowsGeißbach → Loisach
Max. length0.400 kilometres (0.249 mi)
Max. width0.200 kilometres (0.124 mi)
Max. depthc. 30 metres (98 ft)
Surface elevation1,657 metres (5,436 ft)
Seebensee

The Seebensee is a natural high mountain lake (an ice-age affected, rock basin lake[1]) at a height of 1,657 metres, south of Ehrwald in the Mieming Range. It is surrounded by the Vorderer Tajakopf in the east, the Vorderer Drachenkopf in the south and the Ehrwalder Sonnenspitze in the west.

The Seebensee has no significant above-ground inflows and one outflow via the Seebenbach Falls and the Geißbach into the Loisach river. The lake may be reached from Ehrwald on a forest track via the Ehrwalder Alm, via the Seeben Klettersteig, a difficult klettersteig, or via one of the two protected mountain trails Hoher Gang or Immensteig. From Biberwier, the lake may be reached via the arête of the Biberwierer Scharte, and from Leutasch through the Gaistal valley.

Near the lake (to the northeast) lies the managed alpine pasture of Seebenalm. To the south on a rock terrace above the lake is the Coburger Hut owned by the German Alpine Club.

The surface of the lake covers around 6.5 hectares, but it used to be larger. As a result of soil and vegetation analyses it has been deduced that there was a large area southeast of the lake which used to be part of it (today easily visible, especially from above, as a mainly grassy plain) but which has now silted up.[2]

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A panoramic view of the Seebensee. In the centre, the Wetterstein mountains are reflected in the surface of the lake

References

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  1. ^ Christian Wolkersdorfer. "Bergbau an der Silberleithe. Geschichte, Mineralisation und Entstehung der Blei-Zink-Vorkommen im westlichen Mieminger Gebirge" (PDF, Seite 59) (in German). Eigenverlag. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  2. ^ Christian Wolkersdorfer. "Bergbau an der Silberleithe. Geschichte, Mineralisation und Entstehung der Blei-Zink-Vorkommen im westlichen Mieminger Gebirge" (PDF, Seite 62) (in German). Eigenverlag. Retrieved 2017-07-06.

Literature and maps

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