I'm trying to figure that out too!
The Chattahoochee River is a destructive force.
Most rivers are normally both, constructive and destructive, but with the Chattahoochee River you could make quite an argument, that within the last couple of years, it has been been more destructive with all the flooding.
destructive
destructive
banannas
destrictive force
Chattahoochee
, Why there can be a negative value of pore pressure in clay with high OCR and why? Thank you for your help. I just wanted to sound scientific, so, ACTUALLY, it's destructive.
The Chattahoochee River runs from the Chattahoochee Spring in the Appalachian Mountains of north-eastern Georgia until it merges with the Flint River and other tributaries at Lake Seminole, near Bainbridge to form the Florida panhandle's Apalachicola River.
It is a river.
The Tennessee River is bigger than the Chattahoochee River. The Chattahoochee River is 430 miles long. The Tennessee River is 631 miles long. At its basin, the Chattahoochee River discharges an average of 10,090 cubic feet per second. At its basin, the Tennessee River discharges an average of 70,575 cubic feet per second.
The proper noun, a river and city in Florida, is indeed spelled "Chattahoochee."