Hinterrhein (river)

River in Switzerland
46°29′55″N 9°3′45″E / 46.49861°N 9.06250°E / 46.49861; 9.06250 (Hinterrhein source) • elevation2,400 m (7,900 ft) Mouth 
 • coordinates
46°49′24″N 9°24′28″E / 46.82333°N 9.40778°E / 46.82333; 9.40778 (Hinterrhein mouth)
 • elevation
585 m (1,919 ft)Length64 km (40 mi)Basin size1,693 km2 (654 sq mi)Discharge  • average59.6 m3/s (2,100 cu ft/s)[1] Basin featuresProgressionRhine→ North SeaRiver systemRhineTributaries  • rightRagn da Ferrera, Albula/AlvraWaterbodiesSufner See

The Hinterrhein (German: [ˈhɪntɐˌʁaɪn] ; Sutsilvan: Ragn Posteriur; Sursilvan: Rein Posteriur; Rumantsch Grischun, Vallader, and Puter: Rain Posteriur; Surmiran: Ragn posteriour; Italian: Reno Posteriore; "Posterior Rhine") is one of the two initial tributaries of the Rhine (shorter in length but bigger by volume) rising in the canton of Graubünden in Switzerland.

Course

Flowing from the village Hinterrhein near the San Bernardino Pass through the Rheinwald valley, the river flows into a gorge called Roflaschlucht. In this gorge an equally sized tributary, the Avers Rhine, adds waters from the deep Val Ferrera and the very remote alp Avers and its side valley Valle di Lei on Italian territory. After the Rofla Gorge, the valley widens into a section called Schams. The Hinterrhein then reaches Andeer, before passing through another gorge, Viamala just before Thusis. Now another tributary of slightly bigger volume reaches the Hinterrhein as the Landwasser, draining a system of valleys, which is commonly known as Davos joins via the Albula coming from the Albula Pass, which is also the name of a railway line that has become a UNESCO world heritage. Another big tributary of Albula river is Gelgia from the Julier pass area. After flowing to Rothenbrunnen through a valley called Domleschg (a valley with an incredible number of castles, showing the importance of transit in the area) the river is again left alone from civilisation in the floodplain Isla Bella near Rhäzüns, before it joins the Anterior Rhine at Reichenau.

Significance

To learn about the importance of travel along the Hinterrhein, a multiday trekking route is signposted along the river from Thusis to Splügen, where it turns south to Splügen Pass, a historically important transit route to Italy.[2] Nowadays there is no traffic across the Splügen pass in winter, whereas the route across its age-old rival, the San Bernardino Pass, was given a long road tunnel in 1967 that made it possible to keep the road open all year.[3]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hinterrhein.
  1. ^ Hydrologischer Atlas der Schweiz 2002, Tab. 5.4 Natürliche Abflüsse 1961-1980 (natural discharges) (see map)
  2. ^ Hiking Switzerland on historical Via Spluga along Hinterrhein Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Road closures on passes in Graubünden
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Tributaries of the Rhine
Left
(western)
Vorderrhein
Aua da Russein
Schmuèr
Alpine Rhine
Vorderrhein
Tamina
Alter Rhein
Rheintaler Binnenkanal
Lake Constance
Goldach
High Rhine
Thur
Töss
Glatt
Aare
Sissle
Ergolz
Birs
Birsig
Upper Rhine
Ill
Moder
Sauer
Lauter
Spiegelbach
Queich
Speyerbach
Rehbach
Isenach
Eckbach
Eisbach
Pfrimm
Selz
Middle Rhine
Welzbach
Nahe
Moselle
Nette
Brohlbach
Ahr
Lower Rhine
Erft
Map of the Rhine
Right
(eastern)
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
National
  • Germany


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