Lower Saxon Hills


The Lower Saxon Hills are one of the 73 natural regions in Germany defined by the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation. Geographically it covers roughly the same area as the Weser Uplands in its wider sense.
The region is part of Germany's Central Uplands with hills ranging up to in height that extend across northeast North Rhine-Westphalia, southern Lower Saxony and northern Hesse. It is classified as region number D 36 by the BfN; its full name being the Niedersächsisches Bergland.
D 36 is a newly defined region that incorporates 3 geographical units from the old system: numbers 36, 37 and 53, and includes all parts of the Weser Uplands in both its narrower and a wider sense. That said, all three elements of the region, despite their misleading names, cover far more than is generally meant in everyday language or in atlases by the term
Weserbergland''.
In addition the Weser-Leine Hills sub-division includes the whole of the Leine Uplands, whilst the Harz mountains, admittedly are only partly in Lower Saxony, are clearly older in geological time scale and have been given their own natural region rather than being grouped with the lower Saxon Hills.

Natural divisions

The following tables show the landscape sub-divisions in the Lower Saxon Hills.
Those regions which are normally considered part of the Weser Uplands in its narrower sense are indicated by ; similarly the which are normally included in the Leine Uplands are annotated with :