*** Welcome to piglix ***

Wissower Klinken

Jasmund National Park
Nationalpark Jasmund
IUCN category II (national park)
Nationalpark Jasmund 001.jpg
Cliffs and coastline in the national park
Location Germany Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany
Nearest city Sassnitz, Stralsund
Coordinates 54°33′07″N 13°37′23″E / 54.552°N 13.623°E / 54.552; 13.623Coordinates: 54°33′07″N 13°37′23″E / 54.552°N 13.623°E / 54.552; 13.623
Area 30 km2 (12 sq mi)
Established 12 September 1990
Jasmund National Park
UNESCO World Heritage site
Nationalpark Jasmund Ansicht.jpg
The beech forest
Part of Ancient and Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians and Other Regions of Europe
Criteria Natural: ix
Reference 1133bis-011
Inscription 2011 (35th Session)
Area 492.5 ha
Buffer zone 2,510.5 ha

The Jasmund National Park (German: Nationalpark Jasmund) is a nature reserve on the Jasmund peninsula, in the northeast of Rügen island in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany. It is famous for containing the largest chalk cliffs in Germany, the Königsstuhl (German = "king's chair"). These cliffs are up to 161 m (528 ft) above the Baltic Sea. The beech forests behind the cliffs are also part of the national park.

Consisting of only 30 km2 (12 sq mi), this is the smallest national park in Germany. The park was founded in 1990 by the last government of East Germany (GDR) prior to the German reunification.

On June 25, 2011 the beech forest in the park was added to UNESCO World Heritage Site as an extension of the Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians and the Ancient Beech Forests of Germany.

The chalk cliffs face constant erosion. With every storm, parts of the cliffs fall, including rocks and fossils of sponges, oysters and sea urchins.

The most majestic part of the cliffs is the Königsstuhl (English: king's chair) which stands at 118 m (387 ft). One of the most scenic and best known of the chalk outcrops, the Wissower Klinken, collapsed into the Baltic Sea on February 24, 2005, in a landslide caused by spring-thaw weather conditions.


...
Wikipedia

...