Enns (river)


The Enns is a southern tributary of the river Danube, joining northward at Enns, Austria. The Enns River spans, in a flat-J-shape. It flows from its source near the village Flachau, generally eastward through Radstadt, Schladming, and Liezen, then turns north near Hieflau, to flow past Weyer and Ternberg through Steyr, and further north to the Danube at Enns.

Geography

The Enns has its source in the Radstädter Tauern mountains in the Austrian state of Salzburg. In a valley which developed during the ice age, it flows at the border between the Northern Limestone Alps and the Central Eastern Alps on an eastern trajectory through Styria, where it passes the Dachstein group at its southern side. Between Admont and Hieflau, it takes a turn to the North and passes through the Gesäuse, a gorge of a length of, where it penetrates the limestone of the Ennstaler Alpen. Flowing to the north from there on, it reaches the state of Upper Austria at the mouth of the. North of Steyr, it forms the border between Upper Austria and Lower Austria. Finally, it meets the Danube at Mauthausen and the city of Enns.
The Enns is a typical wild water river and draws its water from an area of more than, which is the fifth-largest in Austria. The average outflow at its mouth is.
The Anisian Age in the Triassic Period of geological time is named from Anisus, the Latin name of the river Enns.

History

In the middle of the 19th century, canals began to be built along the between Weißenbach and the Gesäuse, in order to make use of the water for agriculture and forestry.
In total, ten power plants with a total generative power of 345 megawatts have been built by the Ennskraftwerke AG.

Towns along the river

in Salzburg

Currently, there are 15 hydroelectric power stations on the Enns. The power stations are listed beginning at the headwaters:
DamNameplate capacity Annual generation
Gstatterboden26.8
Hieflau63388
Landl25135.5
Krippau30173.5
Altenmarkt26165.9
Schönau30122.8
Weyer37159.6
Großraming72270.7
Losenstein39170
Ternberg40169.7
Rosenau34145.5
Garsten-St. Ulrich38162.5
Staning43203.2
Mühlrading25111.8
St. Pantaleon52261.6

Tributaries

The most important inflows are the, the Salza and the Steyr.

Transport

A major transit route connecting Germany and Slovenia through Austria runs through the Enns valley.
The so-called Eisenstraße runs along the river between Hieflau and Enns, along which iron ore has been transported from the Styrian Erzberg to the steel mill in Linz.