The Chickamauga lake and the Kentucky lake are some of the major lakes in Tennessee. The Norris lake is another major lake in Tennessee.
Tennessee does not have an official state river. The major rivers in Tennessee are the Tennessee River, Mississippi River, Cumberland River, Clinch River, and Duck River.
Six states touch the Tennessee border. Tennessee is bordered by the 8 states Kentucky, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas and Missouri. However, the Tennessee border does not touch either Arkansas of Missouri. The Mississippi River is the western border of Tennessee. The Mississippi River separates Tennessee from Arkansas and Missouri. The Tennessee border touches the other 6 states.
Tennessee
Memphis is in the largest state CALLED.... TENNESEE
Tennessee's western border runs along the Mississippi River. Tennessee, Arkansas, Missouri and most other states on the Mississippi River use it as clear state boundary.
The Mississippi River is nowhere near Ohio. Its tributary, the Ohio River, separates Ohio from Kentucky and West Virginia to the south.
Mississippi touches Tennessee, Arkansas and Alabama. Mississippi is bordered on the north by Tennessee, on the east by Alabama, on the south by Louisiana, and on the west, across the Mississippi River, by Louisiana and Arkansas.
Four states that border the Mississippi River are Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, and Iowa.
Cumberland River, Tennessee River, and the Mississippi River. The state is trisected by the Tennessee River into three geograpic areas represented by the three stars on its flag. The Tennessee River and the Cumberland River flow north out of Tennessee into Kentucky, forming the Land Between the Lakes between Lake Barkley (Cumberland River) and Lake Kentucky (Tennessee River). Both rivers then flow into the Ohio on its way to joining the Mississippi.
Iowa, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, nebraska.Missouri is bordered by Iowa to the north; Illinois, Kentucky, and Tennessee across the Mississippi River to the east; Arkansas to the south; and Nebraska across the Missouri River, Oklahoma, and Kansas to the west.
Mississippi