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Innerste

Innerste
Sarstedt-Innerste-Muehle-Malzfeldt.jpg
The Innerste in Sarstedt.
Country Germany
Basin features
Main source Harz
615 m (2,018 ft)
River mouth Leine
52°14′50″N 9°49′30″E / 52.24722°N 9.82500°E / 52.24722; 9.82500Coordinates: 52°14′50″N 9°49′30″E / 52.24722°N 9.82500°E / 52.24722; 9.82500
Basin size 1,300 km2 (500 sq mi)
Physical characteristics
Length 95 km (59 mi)
Discharge
  • Average rate:
    ±10 m3/s (350 cu ft/s)

The Innerste is a river in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is a right tributary of the Leine river and 95 km in length.

The name Innerste, in earlier times called the Inste (1805), Inderste (1567), Indistria (1313), Entrista (1065) and Indrista (1013), probably goes back to the Indo-Germanic root oid = turbulent, strong. It may be the name referred to in the name of the battlefield of Idistaviso (16 A.D.). It is therefore not a superlative and is declined without a case ending in German e.g.: Hildesheim liegt an der Innerste, not: an der Innersten.

The river's source is in the Harz mountains, 4 km from the town of Clausthal-Zellerfeld to the southwest at an elevation of 615 m and is called Innerstesprung. As a small brook, the Innerste flows west and passes a system of lakes, the first of which is called Entensumpf. The next lakes are Oberer Nassenwieser Teich, Bärenbrucher Teich, Ziegenberger Teich, and Sumpfteich. The German word Teich means "pond".

Having passed through the middle of the village of Buntenbock, the Innerste passes Prinzenteich and turns to the west to Wildemann (390 m), one of the smallest towns in Germany. Grumbach, one of the first tributaries, flows into the Innerste in the middle of Wildemann. The Innerste turns to the North to Lautenthal (300 m), another town on its course and flows parallel to the abandoned track of the Innerste Valley Railway. Here the Laute flows into the Innerste in the middle of Lautenthal. The name of the town means "Laute Valley". Near Lautenthal the Innerste is dammed (the Innerstetalsperre). When the dam was built 1963-1966, a nice lake for holidays and watersports was created. A few kilometers further on, the Innerste leaves the Harz Mountains near the town of Langelsheim (204 m) and turns to the Northwest. The first tributary is river Grane (12 km in length).


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