Moselle Hills

Coordinates: 49°54′03″N 6°55′18″E / 49.900944°N 6.921750°E / 49.900944; 6.921750
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Moselle Hills
Moselberge
The Monzeler Hüttenkopf, the second highest top in the Moselle Hills
Highest point
PeakSchimmelsberg aufm Hüttenberg
Elevation434.1 m above NHN
Geography
Moselle Hills Moselberge is located in Rhineland-Palatinate
Moselle Hills Moselberge
Moselle Hills
Moselberge
Statebetween Reil and Schweich; counties of Bernkastel-Wittlich and Trier-Saarburg, Rhineland-Palatinate (Germany)
Range coordinates49°54′03″N 6°55′18″E / 49.900944°N 6.921750°E / 49.900944; 6.921750
Parent rangeMoselle valley

The Moselle Hills (German: Moselberge) form a ridge, up to 434.1 m above sea level (NHN)[1], on the left bank of the river Moselle between Reil and Schweich in the Rhineland-Palatinate counties of Bernkastel-Wittlich and Trier-Saarburg. There are vineyards on the southern slopes of the wooded hills. They lie on the southern edge of the Eifel region.

Geography[edit]

Location[edit]

The Moselle Hills lie between the village Reil in the northeast and the town of Schweich in the southwest and run past the wine village of Piesport northwest along the Moselle, the aforementioned settlements all lying on the river itself.

Natural regional grouping[edit]

From a natural regional perspective, the Moselle Hills belong to the major unit group, the Moselle Valley (Moseltal, No. 25) and in the major unit of Middle Moselle Valley (Mittleres Moseltal, No. 250). The natural regional sub-unit of the Moselle Hills (Moselberge, 250.2) are separated from the Moselle Eifel major unit (270) (also part of the Eifel) to the northwest by the major unit of the Wittlich Basin (Wittlicher Senke, 251).

Hills[edit]

The hills and high points of the Moselle Hills – sorted by their height in metres (m) above sea level (NHN)[1] include the:

Rivers[edit]

The southern part of the Moselle Hills is bisected in a north-south direction by a stretch of the Salm, and the Lieser cuts through its northern part from northwest to southeast. Both rivers are tributaries of the Moselle.

References[edit]