Puneet Varma (Editor)

Sieber (river)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Lower Saxony,  Germany

Basin size
  
141 km²

Basin area
  
141 km²

Country
  
Germany

River system
  
Weser

Length
  
35 km

Source
  
Hattorf am Harz

Sieber (river) uploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthumb226

Main source
  
on the Bruchberg in the Harz ca. 800 m above sea level (NN)

River mouth
  
In Hattorf into the Oder (Harz) 174 m above sea level (NN)

Progression
  
Oder (Harz) → Rhume → Leine → Aller → Weser → North Sea

The Sieber is a 35-kilometre-long, right hand tributary of the Oder in the Harz mountains of Germany.

Map of Sieber, Germany

It rises at 760 metres on the Bruchberg massif and flows through Herzberg before discharging at Hattorf into the Oder which, in turn, flows into the Rhume. Its tributaries include the Kulmke, Lonau and Goldenke.

In February 1910, as part of his hydrological research into the Rhumequelle, Karl Thürnau dyed the Sieber tributary of the Eichelbach (Herzberg) with six kilogrammes of fluorescein. Three days later, weakly dyed water appeared in the main source of the Rhumequelle. This was confirmed in 1980 by dye tracing carried out by the Geological Survey of Lower Saxony (Niedersächsischen Landesamtes für Bodenforschung). This also indicated links between the Rhumequelle and the Sieber near Hörden and the Oder near Scharzfeld.

The construction of a dam was planned but never realised. As a result the Sieber valley is the only unregulated river valley in the western Harz. The upper Sieber valley has been out-of-bounds to motor traffic since the 1980s from the Forsthaus Königshof and lies partly within the Harz National Park – the road leads to the B 242 federal highway northwest of Sonnenberg.

The river gives its name to the village of Sieber in the middle of the Sieber valley.

References

Sieber (river) Wikipedia