The Yalu River and the Tumen River form the northern border of North Korea.
The Danube River and the Rhine River form the border of much of the northeastern part of the Roman Empire. These rivers provided natural barriers that helped protect the Empire from invasions from various tribes and armies.
Rivers often originate in mountains because of the high elevation and steep slopes, which allow for faster water runoff. This runoff forms streams that eventually merge and flow downhill, creating a river. Additionally, mountains receive higher amounts of precipitation, which contributes to the formation and sustenance of rivers.
This is where the water bubbles up from the ground and creates a river or this is where the river starts. The Source and River Mouth are basically the same thing, they both start the rivers off, as you can tell my the 'Mouth' bit in the word 'River Mouth'.
Deltas can be found on all continents, as they form at the mouth of rivers where sediment is deposited as the river flows into a larger body of water, such as an ocean or sea. Examples of well-known deltas include the Mississippi River Delta in North America and the Nile Delta in Africa.
Mississippi
Two rivers that join the Mississippi River are the Missouri River and the Ohio River.
Mississipi-Missouri
The Minnesota River runs into the Mississippi. So do the Missouri, Illinois, and Ohio Rivers.
Rivers have their headwaters in elevated areas such as mountains, hills, or highlands, where precipitation accumulates and flows downhill. These areas often include springs, melting snow, or rainfall runoff, which converge to form streams that eventually lead to the main river. The headwaters are crucial for the river's flow and ecosystem, serving as the source of water that supports various habitats downstream.
The Mighty Mo or the Missouri River.
the Mississippi headwaters is a kind of thing that is located in the Mississippi river. The Headwaters of a river are it's origins. The multiplicity of small streams that converge to form the main body of the river proper.
There are many cities that are close to the Missouri River - actually located right on the Missouri River. Based on a population of over 50,000, they are: Great Falls, Montana Bismarck, North Dakota Sioux City, Iowa Omaha, Nebraska Bellevue, Nebraska Council Bluffs, Iowa St. Joseph, Missouri Kansas City, Kansas Kansas City, Missouri Independence, Missouri Chesterfield, Missouri St. Charles, Missouri
Iowa is bordered by the Mississippi River on the east and the Missouri River and the Big Sioux River on the west.
Not except in the sense that the Nile River could be in South America (which it is not). The Mississippi River runs from central Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico, and is at no point particularly close to the Pacific Ocean.The closest any major tributary of the Mississippi gets to the Pacific is the headwaters of the Gallatin River (one of the three rivers that combine to form the Missouri) in southwestern Montana. In order to reach the Pacific from there you'd still have to cross the Continental Divide.
The Mississippi River is approximately 2,340 miles long, making it one of the longest rivers in North America. The Missouri River is even longer, measuring about 2,341 miles. Together, they form a significant river system, with the Missouri often considered the longest tributary of the Mississippi.
The two rivers that form the Ohio River are the Alleghenyand Monongahela rivers.