Selz

For the psychologist, see Otto Selz.
For a town in Alsace, France, see Seltz.
For the French river known in German as Selz, see Seille (Moselle).
Selz
Basin
Main source Donnersbergkreis
Source elevation 321 m (1,053 ft)
River mouth Rhine at Ingelheim
49°59′45″N 8°1′33″E / 49.99583°N 8.02583°E / 49.99583; 8.02583Coordinates: 49°59′45″N 8°1′33″E / 49.99583°N 8.02583°E / 49.99583; 8.02583
Size 375 km2 (145 sq mi)
Country Germany
Physiognomy
Length 63 km (39 mi)

The Selz is a river in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, and a left hand tributary of the Rhine. It flows through the largest German wine region, Rheinhessen or Rhenish Hesse.

It rises near the village of Orbis in the county of Donnersbergkreis, crosses the border from the Palatinate into Rhenish Hesse and after about 8 kilometres (5 mi) the town of Alzey in the Alzey-Worms district. There the river passes a pond, and disappears underground, flowing through ditches under the town. On its way it passes through Gau-Odernheim, Nieder-Olm and Ingelheim, before finally discharging into the Rhine in Frei-Weinheim.

The Selz has a catchment area of 375 square kilometres (145 sq mi) characterised by a warm, dry climate with an average annual precipitation of around 500 millimetres (20 in). Despite its low, and often irregular water flow, the Selz is regarded as the main river in the rather dry rolling countryside of Rhenish Hesse. During periods of low water, its waters consist of a significant amount of clean effluent from sewage farms.

Environmental restoration

For a number of decades of the 20th century there was a lot canalisation of rivers and streams in Germany. As a result of this river straightening process that was carried out between 1958 and 1963, the Selz stream was constricted between embankments and flows in a relatively meandering course through the plain between the famous rolling hills of Rhenish Hesse. In order to prevent river bed degradation and to improve both biodiversity and flood protection, the local nature conservation association (Selztalverband) and the district of Mainz-Bingen managed a revitalization of the Selz over a considerable length between Hahnheim, Undenheim and Sörgenloch.

The loss of the floodplain and shorter sections of river caused higher water levels and risk of flood than in the past. Some floods that nearly caused a disaster were the reason for a restoration concept. The concept includes flood protection, river bed stabilization and renaturization measures. The main objectives are:

Floodplains have been widened to between 50 to 100 metres (160 to 330 ft). Nature is allowed to develop undisturbed in biotopes, which protect and promote the biodiversity of the landscape with its meadows, ditches, bank slopes, marsh areas, wetland, phragmites, willows, hedges and boundary ridges. During the past 25 years, the village of Hahnheim has planted 27,000 trees and hedges along the Selz within its boundaries.

Since the Selz renaturation project covers several miles of the Selz's riverbank, it has increased the overall length of the river.

Tributaries

Settlements

Selz spring in Orbis
The Selz spring with attached Kneipp hydrotherapy basin in February 2007
The first few metres are hard

The following villages and towns are located on the Selz (from source to mouth):

Cycle track

Course of the Selz, fence of the spring

A signposted cycle track along the Selz, the Selztalradweg, make partial use of two old railway tracks of the Amiche and Zuckerlottche. Both trackbeds now have a tarmac surface. Sometimes the cycle path along the river bed may be used in dry weather. Both routes are covered in placed by tall trees, shading the cycleway from the hot sun.

External links

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