Covering an area of 536 sq. km, Lake Constance, also known as Bodensee in German, is a large body of water that is shared by the three European nations of Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. The lake forms a part of the Rhine River basin and is geographically positioned at the northern foothills of the Alps. Lake Constance is considered Central Europe’s third-largest lake by surface area and also the second largest lake in Europe by water volume.
Geography

This vast lake is further divided into two parts: the Upper Lake Constance and the Lower Lake Constance. Covering an area of about 473 sq. km and forming the main eastern section of the lake is the Upper Lake Constance or “Obersee”, which also includes its northwestern arm known as the Überlinger See. The smaller western section covers an area of only 63 sq. km, and is known as the Lower Lake Constance or “Untersee”. The two parts of the lake are connected by Lake Rhine or “Seerhein.”
Lighthouse and lion statue at Port of Lindau at Lake Constance. Editorial credit: dvoevnore / Shutterstock.com The Lower Lake or the Untersee is separated from the Upper Lake or the Obersee and the Überlinger See by a large peninsula known as the Bodanrück. The Lower Lake Constance is strongly characterized and divided into different sections around the Reichenau Island by terminal moraines, medial moraines, and glacial snouts. The two German sections are the Gnadensee and the Zeller See, while the Rheinsee is the single Swiss section.
The principal tributary of Lake Constance is the Alpine Rhine. The Alpine Rhine flows into the lake from the southeast close to the Austrian city of Bregenz. It then flows through the Upper Lake Constance into the Seerhein in the German city of Konstanz and then via the Rheinsee it finally feeds the beginning of the High Rhine in the Swiss towns of Rhein and Stein. Some of the most notable tributaries of the Obersee include the Bregenzer Ach, Dornbirner Ach, Argen, Seefelder Aach, Leiblach, etc. The Radolfzeller Aach forms the most significant tributary of the Untersee. The drainage basin of the lake culminates at the Swiss mountain peak – Piz Russein, which forms a part of the Tödi massif of the Glarus Alps, and is located at an elevation of 3,613m.
Islands in Lake Constance

In addition to these islands, there are many peninsulas in Lake Constance. These are the Bodanrück, Mettnau, Galgeninsel, Wasserburg, Höri and the Rohrspitz.
Climate

Ecology

Brief History
It is believed that Lake Constance was created during the ice age by the Rhine Glacier and is considered a tongue lake due to its unique process of formation. About 10,000 years ago, during the last glacial period, both the upper and lower sections of the lake formed a single lake. The rivers Rhine, Dornbirner Ach, and the Bregenzer Ach carried large amounts of sediments from the Alps to the lake, which led to a gradual decrease in the depth of the lake and its further extension in the southeast. In 43AD, the Roman geographer Pomponius Mela was the first person to mention the lakes and named the upper lake as “Lacus Venetus” and the lower lake as “Lacus Acronis”. The lake’s current German name “Bodensee” has been derived from the village of Bodman or the municipality of Bodman-Ludwigshafen, which is situated in the northwestern end of the lake. In the Roman and English languages, the lake has named “Lacus Constantiensis” or “Lake Constance” after the German city of Konstanz, which is located at the western end of the lake.
Tourism
