Puster Valley

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The Province of Bolzano-Bozen, with the Puster (Pusteria) Valley marked in green.
The Province of Bolzano-Bozen, with the Puster (Pusteria) Valley marked in green.

The Puster Valley (Italian: Val Pusteria; German: Pustertal), or Pusteria Valley, is a valley in the Alps that runs in an east-west direction between Lienz in Tyrol, Austria and Mühlbach near Brixen (Bressanone) in South Tyrol, Italy. The term Pusteria or Pustertal is sometimes used only to describe the Italian part of this valley.[citation needed]

[edit] Geological and Geographical Description

The Puster Valley is located in the western part of the Periadriatic Seam, which separates the Southern Limestone Alps from the Central Alps (and also most of the limestone Alps from the central gneiss and slate peaks of the range's central section). Half of the valley drains to the west (to the Adriatic via the Isarco River) and the other half to the east (to the Black Sea via the Danube). The watershed lies in the shallow valley floor (the Toblacher Feld). The Rienz-Rienza river flows through the western Puster Valley (also known as the "Green Valley"). The Drau/Drava river flows through the eastern Puster Valley into Tyrol. The eastern part of the valley is called the Hochpustertal (High Puster Valley) (it: Alto Pusteria; ).

Mountain in the Pustertal, province of Bolzano.
Mountain in the Pustertal, province of Bolzano.

East of Sillian, the Puster Valley leaves the Peradriatic Line (which moves into the Gailtal valley) and turns to the northeast towards Lienz.

The towns of the Puster Valley are located between 750 and 1,180 meters above sea level. The most important of these towns in the western valley are Toblach, Welsberg, Olang, and Bruneck-Brunico; the most important in the eastern valley are Innichen, Sillian, and Mittewald.

The largest tributaries of the Rienz river form the Antholzer Bach, the Ahr, the Pragser Bach, the Gsieser Bach, the Gader, the Pfunderer Bach, and the Lüsenbach. The Pustertal's largest side valley is the Tauferer-Ahrntal. The Drava's largest eastern tributaries are the Sextner Bach and the Villgraten-Bach.

[edit] The Bezirksgemeinschaft Pustertal

The Comprensorio della Val Pusteria (German: Bezirksgemeinschaft Pustertal) was founded in 1969 with the merger of 26 municipalities. Its combined area is 2,071 km² and its population is over 73,000. Its main town is Bruneck. According to the 2001 census, 81% of the population of the Pustertal speaks German as a first language, 13% Ladin, and 6% Italian.

The following municipalities are part of the Bezirksgemeinschaft Pustertal:

[edit] References

This article is based on a translation of the article Pustertal from the German Wikipedia.