Rodderberg

Summary

The Rodderberg is an extinct volcano in the east of the municipality of Wachtberg near Bonn, Germany.[1] The last eruption was 250,000 years ago.

It is situated just above the Rhine valley. Together with the Drachenfels directly opposite, the Rodderberg narrows the Rhine valley. This gorge portion is the southern limit of the lowland-bay of Cologne.

The Rodderberg offers views to the Siebengebirge, the Rhine valley and up to the Cologne Cathedral, about 50 km away.

Geology edit

 
Aerial view of the Rodderberg

The Rodderberg detonated in a phreatomagmatic eruption about 250,000 years ago. This happened when the magmatic plume reached the groundwater level of the Rhine (about 50 m higher than today). After the explosion, the crater was filled with water that formed a maar of about 90 m depth.[citation needed] In the last 250,000 years[citation needed] this feature filled with dust and soil until it was filled up to today's level.[2]

The Rodderberg is now a small hill that has a shallow concave shape.

 
View from the top of the Rodderberg

References edit

  1. ^ Ian Smalley (2020). Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell's Loess Legion. Geologos 26 (2): 163–170 doi:10.2478/logos-2020-0014
  2. ^ Patrick Schläfli et al. (2023). New vegetation history reconstructions suggest a biostratigraphic assignment of the lowermost Rodderberg interglacial (Germany) to MIS 11. Quaternary Science Reviews 302: 107932 doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2022.107932

50°38′33″N 7°11′54″E / 50.64250°N 7.19833°E / 50.64250; 7.19833