answersLogoWhite

0

The Blauhöhle is one of the largest cave systems in the Swabian Alb in southern Germany.The Aachtopf is Germany's biggest natural spring and produces an average of 8,500 liters per second. The Blautopf (German for Bowl of the Blau, "blau" means blue) is a spring that serves as the source of the river Blau in the karst landscape on the Swabian Alb's southern edge, in Southern Germany. The Kremmener Luch is a flat lowland moor between the Glien plateau (near Berlin) in the south, and the Beetzer Heath in the north. The Lichtscheid is the highest hill of the German town Wuppertal. It has an altitude of 350 metres. The Moselle valley is a region in north-eastern France, south-western Germany, and eastern Luxembourg, centred on the river valley formed by the Moselle. The Loreley (also written as Lorelei) is a rock on the eastern bank of the Rhine near St. Goarshausen, which soars some 120 meters above the water line. It marks the narrowest part of the river between Switzerland and the North Sea. Schwanberg is an elevation in the rural district of Kitzingen, Regierungsbezirk Lower Franconia, Bavaria, Germany. Schwansen (Danish: Svans or Svansø, meaning "tail") is a peninsula in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, protruding into the Baltic Sea. Teufelsberg (German for Devil's Mountain) is a hill in Berlin, Germany, in former West Berlin. It rises about 80 meters above the surrounding Brandenburg plain, more precisely the north of Berlin's Grunewald forest. Die Teufelsrutsch (devil's slide) is a densely wooded porphyry knoll in Rhenish Hesse, Germany. Zingst Peninsula is the easternmost portion of the three-part Fischland-Darß-Zingst Peninsula, located in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany between the cities Rostock and Stralsund on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea.

User Avatar

Wiki User

17y ago

What else can I help you with?