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The Lütschine is a Rivers of Switzerland: Contents // 1 The longest Swiss rivers (> 100 km) 2 Rivers with the largest drainage area (> 1000 km²) 3 Rivers and their tributaries 4 See also The longest Swiss rivers (> 100 km) Rhine - 375 km - 36494 km² Aar - 295 km - 17779 km² Rhone...
river in the Portions of the range of the Alps called the Bernese Oberland are in Cantons other than that of Bern, see: Vaud, Fribourg, the Valais, Lucerne, Uri, and Nidwalden. List of peaks The chief peaks of this range, from the Lake Geneva to the Furka, the Reuss Valley and the Lake...
Bernese Oberland, Swiss redirects here; for other uses of that term, see Swiss (disambiguation) The Swiss Confederation or Switzerland is a landlocked federal state in Europe, with neighbours Germany, France, Italy, Austria and Liechtenstein. The country has a strong tradition of political and military neutrality, but also of international co-operation, as...
Switzerland. It flows from Zweilütschinen, where its two A tributary (or affluent or confluent) is a contributory stream, a river that does not reach the sea, but joins another major river (a parent river), to which it contributes its waters, swelling its discharge. A tributary joins another river at a confluence. When a rivers tributaries are listed...
tributaries join, on a length of 8.6 km through the Bödeli and into Lake Brienz as seen from the mountains above it Lake Brienz (German: Brienzersee) is a lake in the Canton of Bern in Switzerland. It is located just north of the Alps. The shores are steep, and there is almost no shallow water in the entire lake. The River Aare enters...
Lake Brienz at Böningen. The two tribuaries are the 12.3 km long Schwarze Lütschine from Categories: Switzerland geography stubs | Switzerland | Ski resorts | Municipalities of Berne ...
Grindelwald and 13.1 km long Weisse Lütschine from the Lauterbrunnen Valley. |