Downstream. The source of a river is always upstream.
The upstream of a river is its mouth, AKA, the opening to the ocean, and everything in between. Downstream is the source, AKA the "beginning", such as a lake, and everything in between.To put it simply:A RIVER:(Mouth)=--------------------------------------------------------------------------------0 (Lake) Downstream
the mouth of the river.?
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'.
The source is where the river starts and the mouth is where it ends.
a cross sectional view of a stream from its source, or head waters, to its mouth the point downstream where the river empties into another body of water.
Magma is formed by the heating and cooling of the Earth's crust. Sediment is formed by the soil that is moved downstream from the source of a river to the mouth of the river and the resulting delta.
The source of a river is where the river starts.
a river gets wider from source to mouth a river gets deeper from source to mouth a rivers load gets smoother from source to mouth a rivers load gets smaller from source to mouth the velocity of a river stays the same from source to mouth
The source of a river is where it begins, the mouth of a river is where it enters the sea.
The land area that includes soil carried downstream by a river and deposited at the rivers mouth is called a delta. The delta is also where the river enters the ocean or lake.
The land area that includes soil carried downstream by a river and deposited at the rivers mouth is called a delta. The delta is also where the river enters the ocean or lake.
The Missouri River officially starts at the confluence of the Jefferson and Madison in Missouri Headwaters State Park near Three Forks, Montana, and is joined by the Gallatin a mile downstream.