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Stemweder Berg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Stemweder Berg (also known as the Stemmer Berge)[1] is a ridge 181.4 metres (595 ft) above sea level[2] on the border of North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony in Germany. It is the northernmost and smallest of Germany's Central Uplands ranges.
Like the adjacent municipality of Stemwede, the ridge gets its name from the medieval Free County (Freigrafschaft) of Stemwede.
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Location
The Stemweder Berg lies on the southern rim of the North German Plain.
Relief

Amongst the elevations on the Stemweder Berg are the following − sorted by height in metres above Normalnull (NN):[2]
Abbreviations: Lower Saxony = LS, North Rhine-Westphalia = NRW
- Kollwesshöh (181.4 m), NRW
- Scharfer Berg (180.1 m), NRW
- Schlichter Brink (ca. 170 m), NRW
- Rauher Berg (167.8 m), NRW
- Wegmannsberg (160.5 m), NRW
- Kahler Hügel (146.4 m), NRW
- Junger Berg (ca. 145 m), NRW
- Dorenberg (140.3 m), NRW
- Feldbrink (128.1 m), LS
- Ostenberg (127.4 m), NRW
- Lemförder Berg (124.0 m), LS
- Brockumer Klei (116.5 m), LS
- Wehdemer Klei (98.1 m), NRW
The Dielinger Klei (91.7 m, NRW) may also be included as it is a dominant hill in the Stemwede area.

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Streams
Amongst the streams near the Stemweder Berg are the:
- Großer Dieckfluss, a western tributary of the Große Aue, which passes the ridge to the south
- Hunte, a southwestern tributary of the Weser, which passes the ridge some way to the west
References
External links
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