Trebel (river)

The Cernosin in the catchment area of the Peene

Cernosin at Nehringen

The Cernosin is an approximately 70 km long river in Mecklenburg- Vorpommern. The name comes from the Slavic and means as much as flow through Rodeland. When the town charter of Tribsees by Wizlaw II in 1285, the Cernosin is mentioned for the first time.

As there are numerous glacial valleys in between Vorpommern Stralsund, Tribsees, Demmin and Greifswald, the Cernosin is cross-linked by ditches and streams with several other waters.

The Pogge villages Cernosin, as the longest source stream, rises in Zarnewanz less than 30 meters above sea level. The Kronhorster Cernosin as another source flux rises southeast of Franzburg. Both unite 3.8 meters above the sea in Pomerania.

From Pomerania Cernosin the first flows to Quitzin over to the west. Two miles after the northern Franzburg ago to 0.8 meters above sea level, the blind Cernosin is opens, it turns west to Tribsees around to the south. Here there is a grave connection westwards to the Recknitz. In Tribsees the underflow, who served temporarily as a waterway begins. Here's a piece of the natural flow was replaced by the Trebelkanal. After the confluence of the Warbel at Bassendorf ( to Deyelsdorf ) the Cernosin flows increasingly southeastward and forms the historic border between Mecklenburg and Pomerania, partly as a southern boundary of the district Vorpommern - Rügen. In Demmin it flows into the river Peene, 0.1 meters above sea level. In the north and southwest by the limited run of Cernosin triangle is an intricate network of trenches with different flow directions, which are connected to each other and connect to several places to Cernosin and Peene. These include Ibitzgraben and Ibitzbach between Siemersdorf ( to Tribsees ) at the Cernosin and Loitz at the Peene and the Red Bridge gap between Ibitzgraben and Nehringen ( to Grammdorf ) at the Cernosin.

The river is another popular water walking and fishing area. In Nehringen and Tribsees are Wasserwanderrastplatz places.

Or when the 1997 floods flowed water of the Oder and the Peene Cernosin up and then through the Recknitz west of Rügen in the Baltic Sea.

In the years 1998 to 2001 extensive restoration measures in the field Grenztalmoor were completed by bass village as part of a LIFE project, with the aim to conserve natural water flow and drained to waterlogged Moore again.

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