Brixentaler Ache

Brixentaler Ache
The diagram shows the tributaries coming from the south, the Kelchsauer Ache (blue highlights) and Windauer Ache (red highlights); the Brixentaler Ache (orange) rises as the Brixenbach (violet) in Brixen im Thale and empties in Wörgl into the Inn. The catchment area of the Brixentaler Ache is shaded yellow.
Location Kufstein and Kitzbühel districts, Tyrol,  Austria
Physical characteristics
Main source Einködl wind gap on the Gampenkogel in Brixen im Thale
1,700 m (AA)
47°24′09″N 12°15′21″E / 47.40250°N 12.25583°E / 47.40250; 12.25583
River mouth near Wörgl into the Inn
500 m (AA)
47°29′59″N 12°03′33″E / 47.49972°N 12.05917°E / 47.49972; 12.05917Coordinates: 47°29′59″N 12°03′33″E / 47.49972°N 12.05917°E / 47.49972; 12.05917
Length 26.4 km (16.4 mi) [1]
Basin features
Progression InnDanubeBlack Sea
Basin size 329 km2 (127 sq mi) [1]
Landmarks
Population ca. 14,000
Tributaries
Navigable not navigable

The Brixentaler Ache is a right tributary of the Inn in Austria. It is located in the state of Tyrol and passes through the districts of Kitzbühel and Kufstein. The Brixentaler Ache is one of the biggest tributaries of the Inn in the Tyrolean Unterland by catchment area (329 km²), but it is only 26.4 km long.[1]

Course

The Ache in the Itter Gorge.

The Brixentaler Ache rises as the Brixenbach in the territory of Brixen im Thale and flows westwards through the Brixental, a southeastern valley of the Unterinntal. Between Westendorf and Hopfgarten im Brixental (the main village in the valley) the valley floor narrows. Immediately after this bottleneck the Windauer Ache joins the Brixenbach from the south. From this confluence the Brixenbach is known as the Brixentaler Ache. After about a kilometre the larger Kelchsauer Ache (also from the south) joins the river. The 26 km long Kelchsauer Ache drains the entire Kelchsau area.

Between Hopfgarten and the section of river forming the boundary between Kirchbichl and Wörgl,[1] the Ache is again forced through a gorge, before it breaks out into the plains of the Inn Valley. On leaving the gorge the Ache is impounded by a large weir and part of the water is diverted into a channel that leads to a small power station run by TIWAG. Below the weir the Luecher Bach enters the main stream from the direction of Söll to the north (Sölllandl). After having been fed by so much water from its big tributaries the Ache now dominates the landscape of the broad and densely settled Brixental valley. After the now around 16 metre wide Brixentaler Ache has flowed through Wörgl, it discharges from the south into the Inn.

The river's catchment area is relatively large, especially as a result of its tributaries, the Windauer Ache and Kelchsauer Ache, and covers about a third of the territory of Kitzbühel District.


References

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