- The
Aachtopf (German: [ˈaːxtɔpf] ) is Germany's
biggest karst spring,
south of the
western end of the
Swabian Jura near the town of Aach. It
produces an...
- (including Feldberg)
Odenwald Spessart Swabian Alb
Danube Iller Main
Neckar Rhine Tauber Lake
Constance Aachtopf Mainau see List of
cities in Germany...
-
distributing into the soil, the Danube's
water flows through caverns to the
Aachtopf,
where it
emerges as the
river Radolfzeller Aach, a
tributary of Lake Constance...
- Mainau, are part of the district. Also
located in the
district is the
Aachtopf near the city Aach, the
biggest spring in
Germany by
water volume. The...
- Sink). Most of this
water resurfaces only 12 km (7.5 mi)
south at the
Aachtopf, Germany's
wellspring with the
highest flow, an
average of 8,500 L/s (300 cu ft/s)...
-
close to Lake
Constance and the
Swiss border, it is
mostly known for the
Aachtopf — Germany's
biggest natural spring in
terms of production. The town was...
-
kilometers further down. Most of the
water lost by the
Danube resurfaces in the
Aachtopf, a
spring for a
tributary to the Rhine. The soil is not very fertile, the...
- German-speaking
lands as a Topf ("pot")
which is
reflected in
names such as
Aachtopf (the
source of the
Radolfzeller Aach) or
Blautopf (the
source of the Blau...
-
Danube river through the
Danube Sinkhole. The
source of the
river is the
Aachtopf in Aach, the
largest spring in Germany, at a
height of 475 m
above sea...
-
Untersee is the
Radolfzeller Aach. The
source of the
Radolfzeller Aach is the
Aachtopf, a
karst spring whose waters mostly derive from the
Danube Sinkhole. Therefore...