Kammel

Kammel
Country Germany
Basin
Main source Unterallgäu west of Mindelheim
704 m (2,310 ft)
47°59′48″N 10°24′03″E / 47.99667°N 10.40083°E / 47.99667; 10.40083 (Primary source of Kammel)
River mouth Mindel near Offingen
439 m (1,440 ft)
48°28′14″N 10°22′42″E / 48.47056°N 10.37833°E / 48.47056; 10.37833 (Mouth of Kammel)Coordinates: 48°28′14″N 10°22′42″E / 48.47056°N 10.37833°E / 48.47056; 10.37833 (Mouth of Kammel)
Basin size 262 km2 (101 sq mi)
Physical characteristics
Length 57 km (35 mi)

The Kammel is a river in Bavaria, southern Germany. The Kammel originates west of Mindelheim, in the district Unterallgäu, and flows generally north. It flows into the Mindel (left tributary) south of Offingen at the Danube, east of Günzburg in the district Günzburg. So it is an indirect right tributary of the Danube. The difference in altitude between the origin and the mouth is 265 m.

Tributaries

Tributaries which flow into the Kammel are (from south to north):

Municipalities the Kammel flows through

Municipalities which are passed by the Kammel are (from south to north):
in the district Unterallgäu: Stetten, Kammlach, Oberrieden, Pfaffenhausen and Breitenbrunn;
in the district Günzburg: Aletshausen, the town Krumbach, Neuburg an der Kammel, Kammeltal, the town Burgau and Rettenbach;

Origin of the name

The name of the Kammel derives from the Celtic kamb or camb which means crooked. So the Kammel is the crooked water. Other authors are of the opinion that Kammel means bog. Both origins of the name can be possible because the meanders of the stream Kammel are clearly distinct.

Attractions in the valleys of the Kammel and its tributaries

Miscellaneous

See also

References

This article incorporates in parts text translated from the article Kammel from the German Wikipedia, retrieved on 2 August 2009

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.