Zorn (river)

Zorn

The Zorn near Waltenheim-sur-Zorn

Map of the catchment area
Location France, regions of Lorraine and Alsace
Reference no. FR: A34-0200
Basin features
Main source In the central Vosges, in the department of Moselle
ca. 830 m
48°33′54″N 7°13′21″E / 48.56500°N 7.22250°E / 48.56500; 7.22250Coordinates: 48°33′54″N 7°13′21″E / 48.56500°N 7.22250°E / 48.56500; 7.22250
River mouth Near Rohrwiller into the Moder
ca. 120 m
48°45′07″N 7°54′57″E / 48.75194°N 7.91583°E / 48.75194; 7.91583
Progression Moder Rhine North Sea
River system Rhine
Basin size 757.2 km² .[1]
Landmarks Small towns: Saverne, Brumath
Physical characteristics
Length 97 km [2]
Discharge
  • Average rate:
    5.91 m³/s

Lützelburg castle above the upper reaches of the Zorn

The Zorn is a river that flows through the Lorraine and the Alsace as the largest and last of the tributaries of the River Moder, before the latter empties into the Rhine. It rises on the territory of Walscheid as the Yellow Zorn (German: Gelber Zorn, French: Zorn Jaune) and becomes the Zorn after its confluence with the right-hand tributary, the White Zorn (Ge: Weißer Zorn, Fr.: Zorn Blanche). It has a length of just under 97[2] kilometres and drains an area of 757 km². The French spelling Zorn first surfaced in the 18th century. Hitherto the river was called the Sorn, which stems from the pre-Celtic era and probably meant "the flowing one".[4] The upper reaches of the river as far as Saverne are viewed as having great, scenic beauty and are also home to many fine examples of architecture.

Tributaries


References

  1. Débits caractéristiques de la Zorn Archived December 4, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. (French)
  2. 1 2 The figures on river length are based on the information about the Sandre. "Fiche cours d'eau - Zorn (A34-0200)"., retrieved 27 August 2011, rounded to whole kilometres.
  3. Banque Hydro - Station A3472010 - La Zorn à Waltenheim-sur-Zorn, (menu point: Synthèse)
  4. Albrecht Greule: Vor- und frühgermanische Flußnamen am Oberrhein, Heidelberg, 1973, p. 97 ISBN 3-533-02294-3, zugl. Diss. of the University of Freiburg/Br. 1971


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