The Iller-Lech Plateau (German: Donau-Iller-Lech-Platte), also known as the Upper Swabian Plateau (Oberschwäbische Hochebene),[1] is one of the natural regions of Germany.
Boundaries
In the northwest the Iller-Lech Plateau borders on the Swabian Jura (unit D60 on the map) and, in the extreme northeast, on the Franconian Jura (unit D61 on the map). The boundary with these two natural regions is roughly formed by the course of the river Danube.
The sub-divisions are based upon the natural regions of Germany as shown on the BfN's Landscapes in Germany map. In the following table these sub-divisions are described from west to east. For the exact location and boundaries of the individual sub-divisions: see the BfN's map Landscapes in Germany (http://www.bfn.de/geoinfo/landscapes/Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine)
Decalcified, waterlogged, brown earth (Parabraunerde) in the valleys to great depth, hence meadow and pasture land
Alternation of open landscape in valleys and forested ridges (pine forests)
On good soils: arable land
Danube Valley between Mengen and Ulm, Lower Riss Valley
Danube Valley between Mengen and Ulm, region between Herbertingen and Bad Saulgau, Riss Valley from Schemmerhofen to where it joins the Danube
From Mengen to the narrow gap by the southernmost outliers of the Swabian Jura the floor of the Danube Valley is filled with Würm Ice Age gravels from the Rhine Glacier
Beyond this gap the Danube flows through a scoured basin of reed marsh
Flat
Much grassland and arable farming
The Riss valley from the south which merges into the Danube valley is more marshy that the Danube valley
The Federsee lies in the middle of this natural region near Bad Buchau
Former tongue-basins (central basin) from the Riss glaciation with the extensive silted-up areas (Verlandungsgebieten)
In the south the silted-up areas give way to Young Drift
Flat
On the silted-up areas there is extensive pastureland in places
In the transition zone between the silted-up areas and the Young Drift moraines the reeds and wetlands vegetation gives way to stands of coniferous forest
Because the lake has since been filled with sediment and gravel in places, the natural dammed lake was once much large
Western Plain of the Lower Riss
Region between Danube, Riss and, roughly, the B 312
Relatively high proportion of forest and grassland (on the Stauden Plateau higher than in the more northern area of the Zusam Plateau and Stauffenberg region)
Boundary lies roughly between the Upper and Lower Lech-Wertach Plain: Türkheim – Schwabmünchen - Kaufering
Divided into lower terrace landscape by the Rivers Wertach and Gennach
Meadows and lower terraces partly waterlogged
Flat
The Brennen are covered by pine forests
Intensive agricultural land use (in the south more grassland, in the north more arable land)
There are only a few remnants of the formerly widespread heath landscape
Together the Upper and the Lower Lech-Wertach Plains form the Lechfeld (Lech Plateau)
Sachsenried and Denklingen Rotwald
Between Gennach and Lech, south of Denklingen
Dominated by the high terrace gravels of the Lech in the north
In the south dominated by Riss Ice Age morainic material, that covers the Tertiary bedrock
Flat to hilly
Pure forest landscape (mainly pine forests)
Lech Valley
Lech Valley from Schongau to Augsburg and from Augsburg to where it joins the Danube
Extensive deposits of post-glacial gravel between Klosterlechfeld and the confluence with the Danube
North of Augsburg: broad U-shaped valley (Kastental) with gravel terraces of different ages; steps between the lower terraces and the loess-covered upper terraces 8 to 10 m high
Meadows and lower terraces waterlogged in places
Mostly used as grassland
On the upper terrace chiefly arable farming
The further north, the more arable farming predominates
Meadows and lower terraces in places covered by heaths with communities of nutrient-poor, chalk grasses and wasteland plants characteristic of the region
Almost continuous belt of alluvial forest along the river
Aindlingen Terrace
Western boundary: Lech Valley
Eastern boundary: parallel to state road 2035 (Augsburg-Pöttmes-Neuburg by the Danube)
Northern boundary: Danube Valley
High gravel plateau, rising towards the east
Divided by deep stream valley that are mostly asymmetrical
^Kutt Schrem (2004), Gesellschaft Oberschwaben für Geschichte und Kultur e.V. (ed.), Pfullendorff, ein Reichs-Statt in Ober-Schwaben gelegen (in German), Tettnang{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)