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Teltow () is both a geological and also a historical region in the German states of and . As an historical region, the Teltow was one of the eight territories out of which the March of Brandenburg was formed in the 12th and 13th centuries. As a result of the (1239–1245) the question of territorial lordship of the newly created heart of the expanding march was finally decided here. Between 1835 and 1952 there was also a county, ; in addition a town immediately south of Berlin, in the present-day county of Potsdam-Mittelmark, bears the name .


Geography and geology

Boundary
The Teltow is not a unified region, either from a historical or a landscape perspective. The present-day term is defined by an that consists mainly of elements. Its natural northern border is defined by the range of the Tempelhofer Berge, among them the Kreuzberg rising to , along the southern bank of the Spree. To the east the borders are formed by the rivers Dahme, as well by the and to the west. To the southwest, the countryside around the Pfefferfließ is also counted as part of the Teltow, although it has no clear boundaries. The regional border in the south is unclear, because the ground moraines here were often eroded by processes. For example, there are many small island plateaux. The boundary of the cultural landscape is general seen as the Baruth Urstromtal. Further south is the heathland of the Fläming.

The Havel river separates the Teltow from the to the northwest. The Nuthe- Lowland, an urstromtal feature, separates it from the plateau of the in the southwest and the Berlin Urstromtal forms the boundary with the in the northeast.

It is, however, disputed whether the Müggelberge hills, which are up to above , in southeast Berlin are part of the Teltow. From a geological standpoint they certainly are, because the hills have a similar development history. However, these upland remnants are completely isolated within the Berlin Urstromtal. If the River Dahme is taken as the eastern boundary of the Teltow the Müggelberge are neither part of the Teltow geologically nor from a cultural landscape perspective.


Geology, geomorphology and soils

Bedrock
One geological feature is the high hill on the northern rim of the Baruth Urstromtal. Uniquely for Brandenburg, the hill is made of . The rising column of -age has pushed through all the more recent deposits here to form a . Because all the readily soluble salts have been leached out, only a solution residue has been left on the surface of the gypsum. is only found at a depth of (about above NN). The gypsum hill is also of historic scientific interest, because it was here, in 1867, that the first borehole in the world to reach a depth of was drilled. The geothermal gradient was found to be about 3 /100 metres; this was also a first.

Sperenberg gypsum was mined from the to 1957 in several quarries. Other salt domes, which do not quite reach the surface, occur under and the Blankensee lake. For the geological structure of the Teltow, they are of secondary significance, however.


Saale glaciation
While the deeply buried sediments of the Elster Ice Age have virtually no impact on the current appearance of the Teltow, the subsurface, sandy, gravelly sediments of the so-called Berlin Elbe course occur over a wide area. These deposits formed between the Elster and Saalian ice advances, when the flowed northwards from the location of present-day and crossed the area of the Fläming which did not yet exist. These sediments are of great economic importance, both as conduits and for the building materials industry. But they only outcrop at a small sand pit at Lindenberg near Jühnsdorf.

The old Elbe strata are overlain by the very thick (40 metres or more) sediments of the Saale ice age. These are usually the depositions of or . At several points they even break through the Weichselian deposits and are immediately on, or at least very close to, the earth's surface (for example, in Glienick near ). Because the Saale ice the underlying sediments strongly, deposits are found at the surface in places. For example, in Schenkendorf near Königs-Wusterhausen in the second half of the 19th and the first half of the 20th century, was extracted.


Weichsel glaciation and post-glacial development
Today's Teltow plateau in Brandenburg-Berlin was formed around 20,000 years ago during the Brandenburg stage of Weichsel glaciation. The Weichsel pushed southwards right over the Teltow before reaching the northern edge of the Baruth Urstromtal, the limit of its expansion to the south. can be found there, for example, around in (Weinberg) and near . However, the line of terminal moraines is very patchy and is traces out an . To the north are ground moraines that have been deposited over a large area. Only south of , does the contiguous ground moraine plateau of the Teltow begin.


Literature
  • Theodor Fontane: Wanderungen durch die Mark Brandenburg. Teil 4. Spreeland. Blankensee. Ullstein, Frankfurt am Main/Berlin, Ausgabe 1998, . Zitat Seite 274.
  • N. Hermsdorf: Zur quartären Schichtenfolge des Teltow-Plateaus. In: Brandenburgische Geowissenschaftliche Beiträge, 1, S. 27–37, Kleinmachnow 1995.
  • Herbert Lehmann: Das Bäketal in vorgeschichtlicher Zeit. Verwaltungsbezirk Berlin-Steglitz (Hrsg.) 1953. (Broschüre)
  • L. Lippstreu, N. Hermsdorf, A. Sonntag: Geologische Übersichtskarte des Landes Brandenburg 1:300.000 – Erläuterungen. Potsdam 1997, .
  • Adolf Hannemann: Der Kreis Teltow, seine Geschichte, seine Verwaltung, seine Entwicklung und seine Einrichtungen. Berlin 1931.
  • Carsten Rasmus, Bettina Rasmus: Berliner Umland Süd. KlaRas-Verlag, Berlin 2002, .
  • Max Philipp: Steglitz in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart. Kulturbuch Verlag, Berlin 1968.
  • Gerhard Schlimpert: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch, Teil 3, Die Ortsnamen des Teltow. Hermann Böhlaus Nachf., Weimar, 1972. Zitat S. 187.
  • Wilhelm Spatz: Aus der Vergangenheit des Kreises Teltow. In: Groß Berliner Kalender, Illustriertes Jahrbuch 1913. Hrsg. . Verlag von Karl Siegismund Königlich Sächsischer Hofbuchhändler, Berlin 1913. Zitat S. 212f.
  • Werner Stackebrandt und Volker Manhenke (Hrsg.): Atlas zur Geologie von Brandenburg. Landesamt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe Brandenburg (heute Landesamt für Bergbau, Geologie und Rohstoffe Brandenburg, LBGR) 2002, 2. Aufl., 142 S., 43 Karten, .
  • Lutz Partenheimer: Albrecht der Bär. 2. Aufl. Böhlau Verlag, Köln 2003 .

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