The river flows the fastest in the middle of the river.
Usually it is the upper reaches (often termed as mountain streams) that flow the fastest. In the lower, flatter valleys, rivers tend to slow down (except in spate, when the river is in flood)).
through middle asia
The second fastest flowing river in the Southern Hemisphere is The Don River in North Queensland (Bowen) in Australia. It rarely does flow, but when it does, it's powerful. I'm from Bowen myself and have seen it. We have always been told that it is the second fastest and i believe The Clutha River in the Southern Island of New Zealand is the fastest.
right in the center of the steam because of the less friction
Laminar flow.
The Huang hu river in China, Ganges in india and Satluj in Himalayas are world's fastest flowing rivers with a speed of water flow crossing over 145Km/hour also.
dont know
Meandering characterized a river's course when its flow begins to slow. Meanders form when slight irregularities in the flow cause the moving water to be directed towards a bank. This bank then erodes and at this point the river gets wider and the flow slows causing sediment to be deposited against the opposite bank. Eventually the process causes a large bend in the river and the river develops meanders.
in the middle course.if a river hits something and if it is slow then it is forsed to flow in curves known as meanders.
on the outside :)
You are going with the flow of the river
Amazon Actually the fastest flowing river in the world is one that no one would ever suspect. I claim the Passiac River at Paterson NJ is hands down the fastest flowing river in the world during flood stage. The Great Falls of the Passaic River at Paterson NJ falls 77 ft into an extreme narrow gorge which at the head of the gorge the river channel is no more than 25-30 ft wide. It is at this point in the falls into which the greatest volume of river water plummets. At flood stage when there is many billions of gallons per day going over the falls, the combination of the velocity of the descending water crushing down onto the channel squeezes or puts pressure onto the water in the channel from above. This combined with a very narrow cross section causes the velocity in that short and small section of the river to easily flow some 70 mph. There is nothing like it anywhere in the country maybe the world. This is not a man made channel, it is natural, so the flow velocity during floods is the fastest naturally occurring flow (if you can call it flow, it literally shoots laterally out of the narrow section of gorge)