The source of the Nile River is traditionally considered to be Lake Victoria, which is located at the intersection of Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania. However, the exact source is a subject of some debate, as the river has multiple tributaries. The most distant source is often identified as the Rukarara River in Rwanda, which feeds into the Kagera River, a major tributary of Lake Victoria. From Lake Victoria, the Nile flows northward through several countries before emptying into the Mediterranean Sea.
The Blue and White Nile rivers, are the source of the Nile river.
There is no such river.
It would take you 33 hours and a half to complete the Nile River. (in a 20kph boat) The source of the river is the "White Nile" which connects to the "Blue Nile" and flows into the Delta as one.
No - The source of the River Nile is the confluence, near Khartoum in Sudan, of the White Nile and Blue Nile
Lake Tana is the source of the Blue Nile and Lake Victoria of the White Nile.
It is the source of the river Nile.
The Nile River
The farthest source of the water of the Nile River is the Ruvyironza River in Burundi. The Ruvyironza River is a tributary of the Kagera River that flows into Lake Victoria and the water leaving Lake Victoria becomes the White Nile River. The Blue Nile River originating in Ethiopia unites with the White Nile River at Khartoum in the Sudan. The combined waters of the White and Blue Nile Rivers, called simply the Nile River, flow from Khartoum to the Mediterranean Sea.
river euphrate is called faraat and river nile is called neel
it is the only source of water in the otherwise dry sahara
The Nile river
The Nile River is not white. The Egyptian flow of the Nile River is formed at Khartoum by the confluence of two major tributaries called the White Nile and the Blue Nile. The White Nile is the longer river, with a source as far south as Burundi (south central Africa). The Blue Nile carries more water and silt, and begins at Lake Tana in Ethiopia (farther east).