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  1. Usage. This template mirrors the one on German Wikipedia called de:Vorlage:Höhe for interpreting height data based on a range of systems. It is currently being used on Simple Wikipedia to assist translation of hundreds of articles, e.g. on railway lines, mountains, rivers and other geographical features that record the heights based on standard German, Austrian or Swiss reference points.

  2. nl.wikipedia.org › wiki › NormalnullNormalnull - Wikipedia

    Normalnull (NN) was van 1879 tot 1992 het referentiepunt voor hoogtemetingen in Duitsland. Duitsland neemt de zeespiegel van de Noordzee bij Amsterdam als nulpunt van de schaal en heeft het Normalnull gelijkgesteld met het NAP. Tussen 1956 en 1992 werd in Oost-Duitsland het Kronstadtpeil gebruikt, net als in de andere Oostbloklanden . In 1993 ...

  3. In geodesy, surveying, hydrography and navigation, vertical datum or altimetric datum is a reference coordinate surface used for vertical positions, such as the elevations of Earth-bound features ( terrain, bathymetry, water level, and built structures) and altitudes of satellite orbits and in aviation . In planetary science, vertical datums ...

  4. Normal heights (symbol or ; SI unit metre, m) is a type of height above sea level introduced by Mikhail Molodenskii . The normal height of a point is computed as the quotient of a point's geopotential number (i.e. its geopotential difference with that of sea level), by the average, normal gravity computed along the plumb line of the point.

  5. The Wasserkuppe, the highest mountain in Hesse. This list of mountains and hills of Hesse contains a selection of the significant mountain and hills located in the German federal state of Hesse sorted in each case by their height in metres above sea level (Normalhöhennull or NHN).

  6. Kleiner Odenwald. /  49.402583°N 8.730139°E  / 49.402583; 8.730139. The Kleiner Odenwald (“Little Odenwald”) is the southern part of the central German hill range, the Odenwald, and is up to 567.8 m above sea level (NHN). [1] It is also part of the natural region of Sandstein-Odenwald in the north of the state of Baden-Württemberg.