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Sosa Reservoir

Sosa Dam
Talsperre Sosa Auersberg.jpg
Sosa Reservoir and the Auersberg
Location Erzgebirgskreis
Coordinates 50°29′17″N 12°38′59″E / 50.48806°N 12.64972°E / 50.48806; 12.64972Coordinates: 50°29′17″N 12°38′59″E / 50.48806°N 12.64972°E / 50.48806; 12.64972
Construction began 1949-1952
Dam and spillways
Impounds Kleine Bockau
Height (foundation) 58.40 m
Height (thalweg) 49.10 m
Length 200 m
Dam volume 101,000 m3
Reservoir
Total capacity 6.33 million m3
Active capacity 5.94 million m3
Surface area 39.3 ha

The Sosa Dam (German: Talsperre Sosa) is a dam in the Free State of Saxony in East Germany. It supplies drinking water to the Western Ore Mountains as well as acting as flood protection.

The dam was built between 1949 and 1952 in the Höllengrund near in the Ore Mountains and taken into service in 1952. The dam itself is a crooked gravity dam made of quarrystone. It is the last dam of this type that was built in Germany. The impounded stream is the Kleine Bockau.

In addition the waters of the Große Bockau are diverted along a hillside channel west of the Auersberg from Oberwildenthal via to the reservoir.

Following the foundation of the state of East Germany, the construction of the dam was turned over to the Free German Youth as the first central youth objective within the first two-year plan. In view of the simple materials used for its construction it remains even today as technically impressive. Its realisation as a youth objective took on a strong ideological slant in the years that followed. The facility was given the sobriquet "Dam of Peace" (Talsperre des Friedens) and was mentioned in the Song of the Youth Brigades (Lied der Jugendbrigaden: "We provided water in Sosa...).

No public ways run over the dam. Bathing, angling and leisure sports are not permitted, but there is a public footpath around the reservoir. There is a car park near the dam that can be accessed by road from .


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