NO.
Individual molecules of the water may get there as rain after a LONG journey.
yes
I'm no sure But you're all loser's
the river thames flooded on 7th january 1928
River Nile
Yes.
No, the Amazon River expells 4.2 million cubic feet of water per second. This is too great for fragile coral to ever form, even disregarding all the other reasons why you would not find coral reefs near the mouth of the Amazon.
The Amazon has never dried up before. This river is far too big, wide, and deep to ever dry up.
Bearing in mind that the Amazon River is way over two thousand miles in length I don't believe that anyone has ever swam it.
did any river or ocean water remove out
ever since people would start throwing away stuff, like in the beginning of the 1900s.
The Amazon is bigger by water volume, but the Nile is longer. he Nile River is the longest river of the world. Its length is 7,088 km or 4,405 miles. The Amazon River is the second longest river of the world. The length of the Amazon River is 6,575 km or 4,086 miles. It is the second longest river of the world. SOURCE: S. Liu, P. Lu, D. Liu, P. Jin, W. Wang, Pinpointing the sources and measuring the lengths of the principal rivers of the world, International Journal of Digital Earth, Volume 2, Issue 1 March 2009 , pages 80 - 87,DOI: 10.1080/17538940902746082
i think its the river that doesn't ever join with another body of water.