Hessel

For other uses see Hessel (disambiguation):
Hessel

Confluence of the Neuer Hessel and the Alter Hessel near the nature reserve of Versmolder Bruch

Data
Location North Rhine-Westphalia,  Germany
Reference no. DE: 316
Length 39.337 km [1]
Source Northwest of Halle (Westf.) in the Teutoburg Forest
Source height ca. 170 m above sea level
Mouth Warendorf-Einen
Mouth height ca. 48 m above sea level
Descent ca. 122 m
Basin Ems
Progression Ems → North Sea
Catchment 212.528 km² [1]
Discharge
at Milte
(4,3 km oberhalb der Mündung, Einzugsgebiet: 204,87 km²)
gauge[2]
Record low:     0 l/s (in 2005)
Average low:    304 l/s
Average mid:   2.12 m³/s
Average high: 18.4 m³/s
Record high:   33.6 m³/s (in 1986)
Right tributaries Casumer Bach, Bruchbach, Aabach, Poggenfahrtgraben, Sandfortbach, Teichwiese, Wöstenbach, Beckstroth, Arenbecke, Speckengraben
Left tributaries Alte Hessel, Lüffe Graben,

The Hessel is a 40 kilometres (25 mi) long, right tributary of the River Ems in the territory of the North Rhine-Westphalian districts of Gütersloh and Warendorf in northwest Germany.

The river rises northwest of Halle (Westf.) on the Große Egge, crosses the Hermannsweg, flows through the villages of Hesseln and Hörste in Halle borough, then through the borough of Versmold through Oesterweg, continuing through the town of Sassenberg and along the southern edge of Milte in the borough of Warendorf, before emptying into the Ems near Warendorf-Einen.

Tributaries include the Casumer Bach, Bruchbach, Aabach, Poggenfahrtgraben, Sandfortbach, Teichwiese, Wöstenbach, Beckstroth, Arenbecke and the Speckengraben.

The Snake's Head Meadows lie along the Hessel near Sassenberg, one of the few areas in Germany in which this strictly protected wildflower occurs.

References