thumb|250px|The Bienwald as seen from space. thumb|250px|Bienwald mill thumb|250px|Ruins of a German bunker in the Bienwald. A Beech tree stands to the left.
thumb|250px|The Bienwald as seen from space. thumb|250px|Bienwald mill thumb|250px|Ruins of a German bunker in the Bienwald. A Beech tree stands to the left.
The Bienwald is a large forested area in the southern Pfalz region of Germany near the towns of Kandel and Wörth am Rhein. The western edge defines the eastern extent of the Wissembourg Gap, a corridor of open terrain between the Bienwald and the hills of the Palatine Forest. In the northwest, the forest is bounded by the so-called "Cattle Line" (), running from Schweighofen to Kandel. In the north, the forest reaches as far as Hatzenbühl and Rheinzabern. The eastern boundary largely runs along the bank of the Rhine from Jockgrim to Hagenbach and Berg (Pfalz). The southern boundary follows the valley of the Lauter along the border of France and Germany. The bulk of the forest belongs to the municipality of Wörth am Rhein. At its greatest extent, the Bienwald is approximately wide along its east–west axis and from north to south. The forest has an area of some . Approximately one-third of the forest is deciduous woodland with the remainder coniferous. The forest has an elevation of above sea level by the Rhine, and rises to above sea level in its western extremities.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).