Alaska has hundreds of rivers.
At a guess, I'd say the Susitna River whose mouth is the Cook inlet of the Pacific Ocean.
Yellow River and Yangtze
The Yukon River flows from Yukon Territory in Canada, through the American state of Alaska to the Bering Strait.
The major Pacific-bound rivers of the Rocky Mountains' Continental Divide are the following:Colorado River - principal river of SW US flows through the Grand Canyon draining into the Gulf of California and joins the PacificColumbia River - largest of the rivers starts in British Columbia, through Washington, and Oregon before emptying into the Pacific. Snake River is its largest tributary.Fraser River - longest river within British Columbia, empties into the Pacific at the city of Vancouver.Yukon River - starts in British Columbia, flows through Alaska, empties into the Bering Sea and joins the Pacific.
It stretches from the Canadian province of British Columbia (BC) through the U.S. state of Washington, forming much of the border between Washington and Oregon before emptying into the Pacific Ocean.
The Niger River.
The Elbe
The following are the major westard-bound rivers of the Continental Divide which are flowing towards the Pacific Ocean.Colorado River - principal river of SW US flows through the Grand Canyon draining into the Gulf of California and joins the PacificColumbia River - largest of the rivers starts in British Columbia, through Washington, and Oregon before emptying into the Pacific. Snake River is its largest tributary.Fraser River - longest river within British Columbia, empties into the Pacific at the city of Vancouver.Yukon River - starts in British Columbia, flows through Alaska, empties into the Bering Sea and joins the Pacific.
Because they have never before been cut
Because they have never before been cut
The River Thames is located in Southern England and flows through Oxford and London before emptying into the North Sea.
The Suwannee River starts in South Georgia and flows through North Florida before emptying into the Gulf of Mexico.
The Snake River originates in Wyoming near Yellowstone National Park. It travels through Idaho, Oregon, and Washington as well as a small bit of Utah and Nevada before joining the Colombia River in Washington and emptying into the Pacific Ocean.