- Source: Upper Harz Water Tunnels
The Upper Harz Water Tunnels (German: Oberharzer Wasserläufe, pronounced [ˌoːbɐhaːɐ̯tsɐ ˈvasɐlɔʏfə]) are part of the Upper Harz Water Regale - a network of reservoirs, ditches, tunnels and other structures in the Harz mountains of central Germany. The German term Wasserlauf refers to the underground element (i.e. the tunnels) of the network of watercourses used in the historic silver mining industry of the Upper Harz. This network of ditches and tunnels was used to supply the mines with headrace waters for their water wheels from the 16th century onwards. In the system of the Upper Harz Water Regale there are over 35 such tunnels with a total length of about 30 km (19 mi).
Construction
Although explosives were already in use in the 17th century in the mines of the Upper Harz, tunnels continued to be hewn out by hand, that is with hammer and chisel for much longer. The reason was that there were difficulties in determining the right amount of gunpowder and fears that tunnels running just under the surface would collapse or that the explosive would produce fissures in the rock causing water to leak away. Almost all water tunnels were driven by counter-heading. Until the 18th century the miners excavated tunnels by following the weakest rock; this sometimes created a zigzag route that deviated significantly from the direct line. Not until the 19th century were tunnels driven in a strictly direct line using explosives.
The incline necessary to create a flow of water often amounted to less than 1% (in other words less than 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) drop for every 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) of length). The profile of the older tunnels, that had been driven with hammer and chisel, was sometimes as small as 1.20 m (3 ft 11 in) high and 0.80 m (2 ft 7 in) wide. The newer tunnels, however, were generally 2 m (6 ft 7 in) high and 1 m (3 ft 3 in) wide.
Compared with ditches, tunnels had the important advantage that the water flowing through them underground could not freeze up. The tunnels were laid primarily to short cut the long ditch runs around mountains. Such cuts also produced a steeper incline (shorter distances descending the same height difference have a steeper slope). This raised the flow velocity and hence the hydraulic capacity of the watercourse. The disadvantage of tunnels was the high investment cost of building them.
List of working Upper Harz water tunnels
The working tunnels shown in this table follow the order in the latest listing by Preussag, which is based on their use in the various power stations.
List of disused Upper Harz water tunnels
"Disused" refers to all those tunnels that are no longer in service. Some of these are completely preserved; others, however, have largely fallen into ruin. The following list makes no claim to being complete.
See also
Upper Harz
Upper Harz Water Regale
Upper Harz Ponds
Upper Harz Ditches
Mining in the Upper Harz
Rösche - generic German mining term for water tunnels
Sources
Knissel, Walter; Fleisch, Gerhard (2004), Kulturdenkmal "Oberharzer Wasserregal" – eine epochale Leistung (in German), Clausthal-Zellerfeld: Papierflieger, ISBN 3-89720-725-7
Schmidt, Martin (2002), Die Wasserwirtschaft des Oberharzer Bergbaus, Schriftenreihe der Frontinus-Gesellschaft (in German) (3rd ed.), Hildesheim: Harzwasserwerke, ISBN 3-00-009609-4
Schmidt, Martin (2005), Das Kulturdenkmal Oberharzer Wasserregal (PDF) (in German), Clausthal-Zellerfeld: Harzwasserwerke
External links
Information by the Harzwasserwerke
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Upper Harz Water Tunnels
- Upper Harz Water Regale
- Harz
- Upper Harz Ditches
- Upper Harz Ponds
- Mining in the Upper Harz
- Bärenbrucher Teich
- Dyke Ditch
- Polsterberg Pumphouse
- Kunstgraben