Bomlitz (river)
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The Bomlitz is a right-bank
tributary A tributary, or an ''affluent'', is a stream or river that flows into a larger stream (''main stem'' or ''"parent"''), river, or a lake. A tributary does not flow directly into a sea or ocean. Tributaries, and the main stem river into which they ...
of the River Böhme in North Germany. It is just under long and runs through the Heidekreis district in
Lower Saxony Lower Saxony is a States of Germany, German state (') in Northern Germany, northwestern Germany. It is the second-largest state by land area, with , and fourth-largest in population (8 million in 2021) among the 16 ' of the Germany, Federal Re ...
.


Name

The Bomlitz is known in the local dialect as the ''Bommelse'', a word originally derived from ''Bamlina'' meaning ''Kleiner Baumfluss'' ('Little Baum River'), because it was the main tributary of the Böhme, formerly known as the ''Bama'' or ''Bumen'' meaning ''Baumfluss'' ('tree river'). Its present name is taken from the village of
Bomlitz Bomlitz is a village and a former municipality in the Heidekreis district, in Lower Saxony, Germany. On 1 January 2020, it was merged into the town Walsrode. Geography Location Bomlitz lies on the Lüneburg Heath in a heavily wooded area. ...
, whose name comes from its location on the right-angled bend of the valley known as the ''Bommel-Etz''.


Course

The Bomlitz rises between Neuenkirchen and
Soltau Soltau () is a mid-sized town in the Lüneburg Heath in the district of Heidekreis, in Lower Saxony, Germany. It has around 22,000 inhabitants. The city is centrally located in the Lüneburg Heath and is known nationwide especially for its touri ...
in the ''Stichter See'', which was formed during the last
ice age An ice age is a long period of reduction in the temperature of Earth's surface and atmosphere, resulting in the presence or expansion of continental and polar ice sheets and alpine glaciers. Earth's climate alternates between ice ages, and g ...
as a '' Schlatt'' (locally: ''Flatt'') or wind-formed, heath lake with no outlet. Today it has largely silted up, but in 1900 it was the largest natural lake in the Lüneburg Heath with an area of . It has a small natural beach. As it makes its way through the almost unpopulated ''Riensheide'' heath the ditch-like brook constantly loses water into the porous subsoil and to the
ground water Groundwater is the water present beneath Earth's surface in rock and soil pore spaces and in the fractures of rock formations. About 30 percent of all readily available fresh water in the world is groundwater. A unit of rock or an unconsolidat ...
that seeps towards the neighbouring stream of the Hahnenbach, 20 metres below it to the north. South of the point where it is crossed by the Uelzen–Langwedel railway, part of the
America Line The America Line (German: ''Amerikalinie'') is the official name of a railway line in northern Germany which is mainly of regional importance today. It runs in an east-west direction and links Stendal in Saxony-Anhalt with the Hanseatic city of Br ...
, in the area of Frielingen and Woltem in Soltau borough, and Bommelsen and Kroge in Bomlitz parish, the Bomlitz valley gradually deepens, forming a textbook example of a former cultural landscape in the
natural region A natural region (landscape unit) is a basic geographic unit. Usually, it is a region which is distinguished by its common natural features of geography, geology, and climate. From the ecological point of view, the naturally occurring flora and ...
of the
Fallingbostel Bad Fallingbostel (Northern Low Saxon: ''Bad Fambossel'') is the district town (''Kreisstadt'') of the Heidekreis, Heidekreis district in the Germany, German state of Lower Saxony. Since 1976 the town has had a state-recognised Kneipp spa and ha ...
loam plateaus. There is a succession of farmsteads and
hamlet ''The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark'', often shortened to ''Hamlet'' (), is a Shakespearean tragedy, tragedy written by William Shakespeare sometime between 1599 and 1601. It is Shakespeare's longest play. Set in Denmark, the play (the ...
s close to the river, each one of which lies on a route crossing the river between the country roads on either side of the valley bottom. The sometimes well-preserved and historic ''
Treppenspeicher A ''Treppenspeicher'' (literally "staircase store") is the German term for a granary or secondary farm building used for storage and is typical of the Lüneburg Heath area in northern Germany. The upper storey of the store was usually accessed via ...
''-surrounded farmyards are hidden in small stands of old deciduous trees, surrounded by arable fields and, further away, by pastureland. The fields were cultivated by peat cuttings or ''
Plaggen Plaggen soil or plaggic anthrosol is a type of soil created in parts of northwest Europe in the Middle Ages, as a result of so-called "plaggen" agriculture on marginal podzol soils. In order to fertilize the fields, pieces of heath or grass includi ...
'' from the heathlands on their outskirts and turned into productive ''Eschflur'' field systems. The often once boggy heathlands are today largely wooded. Above the village of Bomlitz the valley narrows. Here the river
meander A meander is one of a series of regular sinuous curves in the Channel (geography), channel of a river or other watercourse. It is produced as a watercourse erosion, erodes the sediments of an outer, concave bank (cut bank, cut bank or river cl ...
s through near-natural riparian woods and old
millpond A mill pond (or millpond) is a body of water used as a reservoir for a water-powered mill. Description Mill ponds were often created through the construction of a mill dam or weir (and mill stream) across a waterway. In many places, the co ...
s, that were laid out for the old Bommelse
paper mill A paper mill is a factory devoted to making paper from vegetable fibres such as wood pulp, old rags, and other ingredients. Prior to the invention and adoption of the Fourdrinier machine and other types of paper machine that use an endless belt ...
(in 1691) and, later, for the gunpowder factory (in 1815). It then flows through the old Bomlitz estate and then, for two kilometres, through the factory facilities of Dow Wolff Cellulosics, one of the largest and oldest chemical industrial sites in Lower Saxony. The factory terrain is divided by steep banks. The sprawling settlement of Bomlitz climbs the left bank, not unlike the village of Benefeld further downstream which perches on the right bank. Below the bridge of the Wolff industrial siding the slope gets steeper, and the stream passes through the former out-of-bounds area and present-day recreational area of ''Lohheide''. The ruins of the old ammunition factory run by '' Eibia'' between 1938 and 1945 are still visible in places, partly as piles of rubble, partly as embankments which used to be part of an installation with over 250 buildings integrated into the rough terrain. Here the Bomlitz forms what, for the
North German Plain The North German Plain or Northern Lowland () is one of the major geographical regions of Germany. It is the German part of the North European Plain. The region is bounded by the coasts of the North Sea and the Baltic Sea to the north, Germany's ...
, is an unusual, very striking series of meanders with river banks up to 20 metres high. The narrow strips of former valley meadow have degenerated into an alder carr apart from a few less waterlogged places. The course of the stream has been canalised since about 1850, but was renaturalised in places. In the triangle formed by the settlements of
Walsrode Walsrode (; ) is a town in the district of Heidekreis, in Lower Saxony, Germany. The former municipality Bomlitz was merged into Walsrode in January 2020. History Middle Ages 986 Foundation of Walsrode Abbey by Count Walo. The first recorded ...
, Bad Fallingbostel and Bomlitz the stream enters the Böhme at a point dominated by the ruins of a partially blown-up railway bridge.


Water quality

Above Bomlitz the river was and is slightly to moderately polluted. Until the construction of the large
sewage farm Sewage farms use sewage for irrigation and fertilizing agricultural land. The practice is common in warm, arid climates where irrigation is valuable while sources of fresh water are scarce. Suspended solids may be converted to humus by microbes an ...
jointly operated by the firm of Wolff (today: Walsrode Industrial Park) and the parish of Bomlitz, the river below the Wolff factory was one of the most heavily polluted in Lower Saxony. Three small, mechanical sewage works could not prevent the Bomlitz from transporting noticeably heated, cloudy, grey-green water that only provided a habitat for bacteria and whose strong, chemical smell made the environment of the river bank unpleasant. In the decades before 1945 the variable acidity of the river killed off fish several times in the Böhme and, occasionally, in the Aller as well. Until the construction of the sewage farm the water was rated as having the highest levels of pollution. Since then however its water quality has improved to acidity class II-III,Information on the water quality of the northern Böhme
/ref> but other parameters are less favourable. Its smell and appearance are generally normal, so that its charming valley is now heavily frequented by tourists.


See also

*
List of rivers of Lower Saxony All rivers in the German state of Lower Saxony flow directly or indirectly into the North Sea. A–Z A B D E F G H I J K L M N O P *Purrmühlenbach R S T *Tiefenbeek *Trillkebach *Trutenbeek *Twiste (Oste), Twiste U *Uffe ...


References


Sources

* Geowissenschaftliche Karte des Naturraumpotentials von Niedersachsen und Bremen 1: 200.000, CC 3118, Teil 4 - Grundwasser-Grundlagen, Hannover, 1981 * Topographische Karte 1:25.000, Blätter 2924 ''Neuenkirchen'', 3024 ''Dorfmark'', 3123 ''Walsrode'' and 3124 ''Fallingbostel'' (Hrsg.: Landesvermessung und Geobasisinformation Niedersachsen), Hannover * Matthiesen, H.: ''Geheime Reichssache Eibia'', Walsrode, 1987 * Mußmann, O.: ''Selbstorganisation und Chaostheorie in der Geschichtswissenschaft: Der Beispiel des Gewerbe- und Rüstungsdorfes Bomlitz 1680-1930''. Leipzig, 1998 * Seedorf, H.H.: ''Walsrode, Fallingbostel und das mittlere Böhmetal im Jahre 1778''. Erläuterungen zum Blatt 89 Walsrode der Kurhannoverschen Landesaufnahme des 18. Jahrhunderts (Distribution: Landesvermessung and Geobasisinformation Niedersachsen), Hannover, 1986 * Stuhlmacher, H.: ''Heimatbuch des Kreises Fallingbostel''. Magdeburg, 1935 {{Authority control Rivers of Lower Saxony Heidmark Walsrode Rivers of Germany