The junction of two rivers is called a confluence. At this point, the waters from both rivers merge, often creating a larger body of water. Confluences can be significant for various reasons, including ecological diversity and human settlement, as they often provide resources and transportation routes. Notable examples include the confluence of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers in the United States.
A junction. I live in a place called Grand Junction where three rivers merge.
Fort Snelling lies at the junction of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers
Junction is a noun. (it can be an adjective, as in Junctional)
The town of Wentworth is at the junction of the Darling and Murray Rivers.
The Republican and Smoky Hill rivers join at Junction City, Kansas to form the Kansas River.
A deferred junction is typically associated with depositional landforms. It forms when sediment is deposited at the intersection of two rivers or streams, creating a more stable junction point.
the Mississippi River
The junction of the Save and Runde rivers.
Winnipeg
The junction of the Missouri River and the Maria River is known as the confluence of the two rivers. However, the Maria River is a smaller tributary and may not always be widely recognized in various contexts. The confluence typically refers to the point where the two rivers meet, which is significant in terms of water flow and ecology.
Two or more train tracks meet at a junction (railway junction).
At the junction of the Arkansas and Mississippy rivers