Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ConcordiaseeConcordiasee - Wikipedia

    61 metres (200 ft) Water volume. 0.103 cubic kilometres (0.025 cu mi) Surface elevation. 103 metres (338 ft) above Normalhöhennull. Settlements. Seeland, Germany. The Concordiasee (concordia being Latin for "harmony") is an artificial lake in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It is located about 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) northwest of Aschersleben .

  2. 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.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LotterbergLotterberg - Wikipedia

    Lotterberg. /  51.1852000°N 9.4211083°E  / 51.1852000; 9.4211083. Lotterberg is a 305 m (1,001 ft) ( NHN) high hill between the villages of Wolfershausen and Deute in Schwalm-Eder-Kreis, Hesse, Germany.

  4. In contrast, the zero level surface of the normal heights since 1992 (DHHN92, DHHN2016) is refered to as Normalhöhennull (NHN). It is realized by quasigeoid models (DHHN92: GCG05/GCG2011, DHHN2016: GCG2016). Further information / Literature DE – Germany. Web application “Computation of quasigeoid heights with GCG2016” (in German)

  5. Normalhöhennull ("standard elevation zero") or NHN is a standard reference level, the equivalent of sea level, used in Germany to measure height. In geographical terms, NHN is the reference plane for the normal height of a topographical eminence above sea level used in the 1992 German Mean Height Reference System ( Deutsches Haupthöhennetz ...

  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.