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The Blue Nile and the White Nile which join to form the Nile River and its delta where it flows into the Mediterranean Sea
As tributaries form to enlarge the river, distributaries form if there is a delta, but few rivers divide compared to those that only have smaller rivers contributing to them. No, they dont separate into separate watercourses.
The Persian Gulf.
No, because a delta is usually at the end of a river [leading out] a tributary feeds water into a river.
Hail can only help create rivers. It doesn't hail as often as it rains or snows, which comprises the majority of the water that flows to form rivers. However, when it does hail, the hail will melt and join the downward flow of water that creates rivers.
Where two rivers join, this is known as the confluence.
Two rivers that join the Mississippi River are the Missouri River and the Ohio River.
The Arkansas River arises in Colorado and still has that name when it flows into the Mississippi. It's the only Colorado river I know of that flows directly into the Mississippi. The Platte (both the North and South) arise in Colorado and join in Nebraska before flowing into the Missouri, which then joins the Mississippi. The Republican and Smoky Hill Rivers join in Kansas to form the Kansas River, which then flows into the Missouri and thence the Mississippi. All other significant Colorado rivers that don't join one of the above either wind up in the Rio Grande or the Colorado River, neither of which ever joins the Mississippi.
The Allegheny and Monogahela rivers joinb at Pittsburgh to form the Ohio River.
Streams can slowly join together to form rivers.
True
The Mississippi River rises out of Lake Itasca in northern Minnesota and flows southward for 2,320 miles to the Mississippi River Delta at the Gulf of Mexico.