Aerial photograph of the Weser Uplands (centre) with the Bückeburg and Harrl ridges (centre left). The Harrl is the smaller wooded ridge to the front
The Harrl is a high, wooded western outlier of the Bückeberg hill ridge in the Weser Uplands of central Germany. It is up to 213 m above sea level (NN)[1] and lies in the Lower Saxon county of Schaumburg.
^Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation
The Harrl is a high, wooded western outlier of the Bückeberg hill ridge in the Weser Uplands of central Germany. It is up to 213 m above sea level (NN)...
The Weser Uplands consist of hilly ridges and include the Wesergebirge, Harrl, Süntel, Bückeberg and Deister. The Schaumburg Forest is a continuous strip...
Uplands: Bückeberg – 367 m above sea level (NN) Deister – 405 m above NN Harrl – 211 m above NN Kleiner Deister (L) – 346 m above NN Nesselberg (L) – 378 m above NN...
characteristics of the hips. In 1855, in a sandstone quarry near Bückeburg on the Harrl, a fossil was found of a small dinosaur. Most of its bones were in a poor...
only a few hills of the Calenberg Uplands, such as the nearby ridges of Harrl and Bückeberge. To the west, on the other side of the Porta Westfalica,...