Five different waterfalls make up Victoria falls horseshoe falls, rainbow falls, devil cataract, main falls and eastern cataract
There are three different waterfalls that make up Niagara Falls, The American Falls, Horseshoe Falls, and the Bridal Veil Falls, which is a very small waterfall just beside the American Falls. It was also previously known as Luna Falls and Iris Falls.
The American Falls, Bride Veil Fall, & Horseshoe Falls
There are three in total - 'Canadian Horseshoe Falls' 'American Falls' 'Bridal Veil Falls' Of these, the horseshoe falls are the biggest and the bridal veil falls are the smallest.
The Bridal Veil Falls is the smallest of the three waterfalls that make up Niagara Falls.
The cascading waterfalls in Yosemite were made possible by the glaciers that carved Yosemite Valley, which gave the cliffs needed to make the impressive drops possible. The rivers that feed the waterfalls themselves are mostly from snow melt, so often times don't last too long into the summer. Some waterfalls like Vernal Falls, Nevada Falls, and Bridalveil Falls have water year-round, expect of course, in the winter when they become frozen.
There are 3 falls American Falls, Bridalveil Falls, and Horseshoe Falls. They are all viewable from the Canadian side
Three falls make up Niagara Falls. The largest and most spectacular is Canada's Horseshoe Falls. On the US side are the much smaller American Falls and the very small Bridal Veil Falls.
V shaped valleys, meanders, oxbow lakes, gorges, waterfalls rapids & deltas are some.
Waterfalls are formed when water flows over resistant rock. And yes they do.
David Livingstone was from the country of England, and therefore to horor his queen and therefore his country, he named the falls for Queen Victoria. Make sense? It would be like an American making a discovery of an island or something of the sort and naming it for their president, spouse, or another important person in thier life whom they honor and respect.
it cant make energy it is kinetic if it flows
It B. 4.20*10/5 cubic meters per hour