the Tweed river is the border between NSW and Queensland
The Tweed River forms the border between Queensland and New South Wales at its mouth. The majority of the Tweed is in New South Wales. Though irrelevant to the question, there is also a Tweed River in the UK, and one in New Zealand.
The River Tee starts in Cross Fell,Northern England. The mouth of the river is NorthSea. The basin country is England and the length of it is 137 km (87 miles). By the way the source elevation is 760km(2500 feet). The Basin are is 1834km squared(708 miles squared). It rises on the Eastern Slope of Cross fell in Pennines.
The Macintyre River and the Tweed River each form part of the border between Queensland and New South Wales.
The states of Victoria and New South Wales are separated by the Murray River. This forms the border for much of the way.
The rivers that form part of the border between New South Wales and Queensland are the Dumaresq (pronounced Dew-MERR-eck), the Macintyre and the Tweed. At the coast, the Tweed River forms the first part of the border. Further inland, the Macintyre and Dumaresq Rivers each form part of the border. The entire border is not actually formed by rivers.
Some of the more significant rivers in the northern part of New South Wales include the Clarence, Tweed, Richmond, Namoi, MacIntyre, Dumaresq, Severn, Barwon, Gwydir, Bogan and Castlereagh Rivers.
The Murray river runs through South Australia, New South Wales and Victoria while the Darling river runs through New South Wales.
The Murray River forms the border between New South Wales and Victoria.
The Murray River borders Victoria and New South Wales.
The Clarence River flows through the Northern part of New South Wales. Wales is also a state, not a territory.
The Lachlan River is in New South Wales, Australia.
The Clarence River flows through the Northern part of New South Wales. Wales is also a state, not a territory.