Lake Superior and Lake Shanghai.
Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.
The north-eastern part of the Roman Empire was formed by only one river: the Danube. The whole of the northern boundary of the Roman Empire was demarcated mostly by two rivers: the Danube and the Rhine. The latter marked the north-western frontier.
The Tigris and Euphrates
I Follow Rivers was created on 2011-01-21.
The two rivers that form the border of much of the northeastern part of the Roman Empire are the Rhine and the Danube. The Rhine River delineated the boundary between the Roman Empire and the Germanic tribes to the north, while the Danube served as a significant frontier along the eastern edge, separating the empire from various tribes and regions. Both rivers played crucial roles in trade, military strategy, and the movement of goods and people within the empire.
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.
No, rivers and fault lines are two different geological features. Rivers are bodies of water that flow across the landscape, while fault lines are fractures in the Earth's crust where movement has occurred. Rivers can sometimes follow or be influenced by fault lines, but they are not the same thing.
The important rivers of the Songhai Empire were the Niger River and the Senegal River. These rivers played a crucial role in the empire's economy and trade as they provided transportation routes for goods and facilitated communication between different regions of the empire.
The Assyrian Empire had both highlands and rivers, but the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers were far more important than the few highland regions they controlled.
Spain's borders do no follow rivers.
Rivers
Rhine and Danube Rivers.