River
:
|
River running into Harrietville Trout Farm |
A
river is a large natural
waterway. The source of a river may be a
lake, a
spring, or a collection of small streams, known as
headwaters. From their source, all rivers flow downhill, typically terminating in the
ocean. The mouth, or lower end, of a river is known as its
base level.
A river's water is normally confined to a
channel, made up of a
stream bed between
banks. Most
rainfall on land passes through a river on its way to the
ocean. Smaller side streams that join a river are
tributaries. The scientific term for any flowing natural waterway is a
stream; so in technical language, the term river is just a shorthand way to refer to a large stream.
|
A river flowing over a slight change in topography. |
A river conducts water by constantly flowing perpendicular to the elevation curve of its bed, thereby converting the
potential energy of the water into
kinetic energy. Where a river flows over relatively flat areas, the river will
meander: start to form loops and snake through the plain by
eroding the river banks. Sometimes the river will cut off a loop, shortening the channel and forming an
oxbow lake from the cut off section. Rivers that carry large amounts of
sediment develop conspicuous
deltas at their mouths. Rivers whose mouths are in saline
tidal waters may form
estuaries.
Over time, rivers cut away at their beds, eventually forming a more gentle gradient.
*
Youthful river - a river with a steep gradient that has very few tributaries and flows quickly. Its channels erode deeper rather than wider.
*
Mature river - a river with a gradient that is less steep than those of youthful rivers and flows more slowly than youthful rivers. A mature river is fed by many tributaries and has more discharge than a youthful river. Its channels erode wider rather than deeper.
*
Old river - a river with a low gradient and low erosive energy. Old rivers are characterized by flood plains.
*
Rejuvenated river - a river with a gradient that is raised by the earth's movement.
Where a river descends quickly over sloped topography,
rapids with
whitewater or even
waterfalls occur. Rapids are often used for recreational purposes (
see Whitewater kayaking). Waterfalls are sometimes used as sources of energy, via
watermills and
hydroelectric plants.
|
The "mouth", where this river comes out of the melting ice (also visible in the previous photo) |
Rivers begin at their
source in higher ground, either rising from a
spring, forming from
glacial meltwater, flowing from a body of water such as a
lake, or simply from damp, places where the
soil is
waterlogged. They end at their
base level where they flow into a larger body of water, the
sea, a lake, or as a
tributary to another (usually larger) river. In
arid areas rivers sometimes end by losing water to
evaporation and percolation into dry,
porous material such as
sand, soil, or
pervious rock. The area drained by a river and its tributaries is called its watershed, catchment basin or
drainage basin. (Watershed is also used however to mean a boundary between drainage basins.)
Starting at the mouth of the river and following it upstream as it branches again and again, the resulting river network forms a dendritic (tree-like) structure that is an example of a natural random
fractal.
Rivers have been important historically in determining political boundaries.
The
Orange River discharges into the
Atlantic ocean and forms the
International boundary between various provinces and countries along its route. The source of the Orange River is in the
Lesotho mountains. The
Lesotho Highlands Water Project was conceived to divert water from
Lesotho into the
Vaal River system, itself a
tributary of the Orange River, to supply the water needs of the
Gauteng province in
South Africa. Water from the
Delivery tunnel is discharged into the
Ash River. The spot has become a popular
Kayaking venue.
The
Danube was a long standing border of the
Roman Empire, and today forms most of the border between
Bulgaria and
Romania.
The Mississippi in North America, and the Rhine in Europe, are major east-west boundaries in those continents.
*
International Scale of River Difficulty - The scale is used to rate rivers for navigation. Class I is the easiest and Class VI is the hardest.
*
Strahler Stream Order - The Strahler Stream Order is a method to rank rivers based on the connectivity and hierarchy of contributing tributaries. Headwaters are first order while the
Amazon River is twelfth order. Approximately 80 percent of the rivers and streams on Earth are of the first and second order.
The flora and fauna of rivers are much different from those of the ocean because the water is
fresh (non-salty). Living things in a river must be adapted to the current of the moving water. For a detailed look at these processes, see
lotic system ecology.
Human
pollution of rivers is common, and few rivers in the world are free of man-made substances. The most common point source of pollutant is probably
sewage piped into rivers, but chemical pollution is also common, and industrial accidents (and/or negligence) account for significant destruction of riparian
biomes.
Heated water discharged into rivers by
power plants and
factories also affects river biota. Non-point source pollutants such as diffuse pollution from
agriculture, urbanisation,
logging, construction activity and
slash-and-burn techniques are all recognised as sources of sediment and other pollutants.
Techniques have been developed to analyze
dispersal of water pollutants in river systems. For example the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency funded research to develop the
DSSAM Model to assess the transport of soluble
nitrogen, reactive
phosphorus,
total dissolved solids and
dissolved oxygen in the
Truckee River, which flows through both
California and
Nevada.
In places where the elevation changes of a river are great,
dams for hydroelectric plants and other purposes are often built. This disrupts the natural flow of the river, and creates a lake behind the dam. Often the building of dams affects the whole of the river, even the part above the dam, as migrating
fish are hindered (see
fish ladder), waterflow is no longer bounded by seasonal changes and
sediment flow is blocked. Dams are useful in many ways, such as: providing hydro-electric power; acting as regulator of river flow so as to regulate the occurrence of flooding, which is especially important to wet-rice agriculture; and also to improve navigation and transport on the river. Often, dams such as
Hoover Dam along
Colorado River become famous tourist attractions. Critics of dams, especially 'green' advocates, argue that dams remove upper-river biodiversity such as through deforestation and forced migration of rural villages and indigenous tribes. Furthermore, trapping of river sediments behind the dams lead to salination and loss of nutrients for down-water fish. It also raises concern of earthquakes due to instablity of incompetent dams which have to support thousands of tonnes of sediments behind them. One very famous and problematic dam is the
Aswan High Dam in the
Nile.
Flooding is a natural part of a river's cycles. Human activity, however, has upset the natural way flooding occurs by walling off rivers and straightening their courses. Removal of bogs, swamps and other
wetlands in order to produce farmland has reduced the absorption zones for excess water and made floods into sudden disasters rather than gradual increases in water flow. In ancient
Egypt, life was made possible through the floods of the
Nile and the accompanying
silt and
sediment which enriched the fields with fresh
nutrients. Nowadays, since people have built on these floodplains, floods are disasters, causing untold property loss each year.
Human interference in the form of
deforestation can also worsen conditions. The removal of
vegetation leads to a reduction in interception (vegetation stopping
precipitation) and the 'weakening' of soil since plant roots no longer hold it together. As a result there is a reduced
Infiltration capacity (how much water the soil can hold) and greater infiltration (precipitation going into the ground). This leads to faster
soil saturation and therefore greater
overland flow (also known as
surface runoff) and therefore, there are
flash floods as the lag time decrease.
 |
Small river in rural Indiana, United States. Rivers of this size are often referred to as a "creek." |
Logjams are barriers within rivers, created by dead and uprooted
trees. Over time, the obstruction prevents further logs to bypass, resulting in the creation of new network channels. According to author David R. Montgomery in his book,
King of Fish, a logjam also causes water to buildup within a small space, forming peaceful pools within the main channel which provide shelter for young
salmon. The existence of these deep pools along with the complex web of channels creates an ideal salmon
habitat. Today, many believe that the rebuilding of salmon runs is contingent upon reproducing the same environment shaped by logjams. As a result, many
scientists have attempted to recreate artificial logjams. Marc Duboiski and Mike Ramsey of the Salmon Recovery Funding board staff, George Pess of the
National Marine Fisheries Service, and Kevin Bauersfeld of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife have prepared the Report to the Salmon Recovery Funding Board On the Engineered Log Jam (ELJ) Workshop ([
1]), with the hope of mimicking natural logjams.
In wintertime, rivers can be subject to ice jams or dams. An ice dam can create flooding upstream. When the jam melts or breaks apart, it can lead to flash flooding downstream. Ice jams caused
flooding in the Northeastern United States in 1996.
In its natural state a river may be inconvenient to man in a variety of ways. Rivers in inhabited areas have therefore been managed or controlled to make them more useful and less disruptive to human activity.
*The river channel may be
dredged to make it deeper for navigation or to prevent flooding.
*Dams (see above) or
weirs may be built to control the flow, store water, or extract energy.
*
Levees may be built to prevent flooding.
*
Sluice gates provide a means of controlling flow and adjusting river levels.
*
floodways may be added to draw off excess river water in times of flood.
*
Canals connect rivers to one another for water transfer or navigation.
*River courses may be modified to improve navigation, or straightened to increase the flow rate.
River management is an ongoing activity as rivers tend to 'undo' the modifications made by man. Dredged channels silt up, sluice mechanisms deteriorate with age, levees and dams may suffer seepage or catastrophic failure.
The world's ten longest rivers
It is difficult to measure the length of a river, mainly because rivers have a
fractal property, which means that the more precise the measure, the longer the river will seem. Also, it is difficult to determine exactly where a river begins or ends, as very often, upstream rivers are formed by seasonal streams, swamps, or changing lakes.
These are average measurements.
#
Nile (6,690 km)#
Amazon (6,452 km)#
Yangtze (Chang Jiang) (6,380 km)#
Mississippi-
Missouri (6,270 km)#
Yenisey-
Angara (5,550 km)#
Ob-
Irtysh (5,410 km)#
Huang He (Yellow) (5,464 km)#
Amur (4,410 km)#
Congo (4,380 km or 4,670 km). (The source of this river is disputed.)#
Lena (4,260 km)
For a longer list see
Longest rivers. This also gives more information on measuring river lengths.
Well-known rivers (in alphabetic order)
* The
Amazon River, the largest river in the world (in terms of volume and water cubic metres/second)
* The
American River, the site of
Sutter's Mill*
Amu Darya* The
Amur, the principal river of eastern
Siberia and the border between Russia and China
* The
Arkansas River, a major tributary of the
Mississippi River* The
Arno, the river that runs through
Florence* The
Arvandrud (Shatt al-Arab), the river that borders
Iran and
Iraq*
Brahmaputra, the principal river in North East India and
Tibet* The
Chao Phraya, the principal river of
Thailand* The
River Clyde, which runs through
Glasgow* The
Colorado River (in
Argentina)
* The
Colorado River (in the
United States), the principal river of the
American Southwest* The
Columbia River, the principal river of the
Pacific Northwest* The
Congo, the principal river of central
Africa* The
Danube, the principal river of central and southeastern
Europe*
De la Plata, the widest river in the world
* The
Ebro, a river in northwestern
Spain* The
Elbe, a major
German river,
Hamburg is situated on it
* The
Euphrates, one of the twin principal rivers of
Mesopotamia (
Iraq)
* The
Ganges, the principal river of
India*
Han-gang, the river that runs through
Seoul* The
Helmand River, the principal river of
Afghanistan* The
Huang He (or Yellow River), one of the principal rivers of
China* The
Hudson River, the principal river of
New York* The
Indus River, the principal river of
Pakistan* The
River Jordan, the principal river of
Israel*
Karun, the principal navigable river of southern
Iran* The
River Kaveri, the principal river of
South India*
Lena, the principal river of northeastern
Siberia* The
Mackenzie River, the longest river in
Canada*
Magdalena, the principal river of
Colombia* The
Main, a river in
Germany* The
Mekong, a principal river of
Southeast Asia* The
River Mersey, the river on which sits the English city of
Liverpool*
Maas, the principal river of the southern provinces of the
Netherlands and eastern
Belgium* The
Mississippi River, the principal river of central and southern
United States* The
Missouri River, one of the principal rivers of the
Great Plains* The
Murray River, the principal river of southeastern
Australia* The
Niagara River, the river which flows between
Lake Erie and
Lake Ontario, and which flows over the
Niagara Escarpment (better known as
Niagara Falls)
* The
Niger, the principal river of west
Africa* The
Nile, The longest river in the world, principal to
Egypt and northeastern Africa
* The
Ob, a large river of
Siberia* The
Oder, a major river in Central Europe
* The
Ohio River, the largest river between
Mississippi and the
Appalachian Mountains* The
Orinoco, the principal river of
Venezuela* The
Paraná, a major river in
South America* The
Paraguay, the principal tributary of the Parana river and an important river in
Brazil,
Bolivia,
Paraguay and
Argentina* The
Po, one of the principal rivers of
Italy* The
Potomac River, the principal river of the
Washington, D.C. and the souther border of
Maryland in the
United States* The
Rhine, the principal river of northwestern
Europe* The
Rhône, the principal river of southern
France* The
Rio Grande, the river that forms part of the border between the
United States and
Mexico* The
Saint Lawrence River, which drains the
Great Lakes* The
Savannah River, a major river in the southeastern United States, forming most of the border between the states of
Georgia and
South Carolina* The
Seine, the river that runs through
Paris* The
Segura, a river in southeastern
Spain* The
River Severn, the longest river in
Great Britain*
Shinano-gawa, the longest river in
Japan* The
Snake River, the largest tributary of the Columbia river in
Washington* The
Susquehanna River, the principal river of
Pennsylvania and the
Chesapeake Bay*
Tajo, the largest river in the
Iberian Peninsula* The
River Tay, the largest river in
Scotland* The
Tennessee River, an important tributary of the Mississippi that flows through Eastern/Western
Tennessee,
Northern Alabama, and
Kentucky* The
Thames, the river that runs through
London* The
Tiber, the river that runs through
Rome* The
Tigris, one of the twin principal rivers of
Mesopotamia*
Tonegawa, one of largest rivers in
Japan* The
Vistula, the principal river of
Poland* The
Vltava, the river that runs through
Prague* The
Volga River, the principal river of
Russia* The
Yangtze (Chang Jiang), the longest river in
China* The
Yenisei, a large river in
Siberia* The
Yukon, the principal river of
Alaska and the
Yukon Territory* The
Zambezi, the principal river of southeastern
AfricaOther lists
*
List of waterways*
List of rivers by continent**
List of rivers of Africa**
List of rivers of the Americas**
List of rivers of Antarctica**
List of rivers of Australia**
List of rivers of Asia**
List of rivers of Europe***
Rivers of the United Kingdom**
List of rivers of Oceania***
List of rivers of New Zealand*
List of river name etymologiesReal rivers
*The Thames in
Edward Rutherfurd's
London.
*The Thames in
Jerome K. Jerome's
Three Men in a Boat.
*The Thames and the Congo in
Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness.
*The
Mississippi in
Mark Twain's
Huckleberry Finn.
*The
River Liffey through Dublin in
James Joyce's
Finnegans Wake.
Mythological rivers
See also river deity.*In
Greek mythology, the
Acheron,
Cocytus,
Phlegethon,
Lethe and
Styx (the five rivers of
Hades); and the
Eridanus.
*The
Alph, an underground river imagined by various mystics and mentioned in
Coleridge's poem
Kubla Khan.
*The
Sambation river stops flowing every Saturday.
*The rivers of the
Rigveda (notably the
Sapta Sindhu) are partly identifiable with actual rivers (
Sindhu,
Ganga,
Kubha), and partly underwent transformation into mystical or cosmological rivers (
Rasā). Notably, the name of the
Sarasvati River over time came to refer to a
goddess of wisdom, a mystical invisible river, and an actual river of
Rajasthan.
Fictional rivers
*River
Ankh traversing the city of
Ankh-Morpork in
Terry Pratchett's
Discworld series.
*
Chocolate river in
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
*River Djel in the country of
Djelibeybi in
Terry Pratchett's
Discworld series.
*The River in the
Riverworld novels of
Philip José Farmer.
*
Rivers of Middle-earth in various works of
J. R. R. Tolkien.
*The Zora river in
Ocarina of Time*
Aqueduct*
Canal*
Drought*
List of river name etymologies*
Water disputeCrossings
Rivers may be crossed by:
*
bridges
*
ferries*
fords
*
tunnels.
Transport
*
barge*
riverboat*
sailing*
towpath*
Luna B. Leopold,
A View of the River, Harvard University Press (1994), hardcover, 298 pages, ISBN 0674937325 A non-technical primer on the
geomorphology and
hydraulics of the river. Luna B. Leopold, Emeritus Professor of Geology at the University of California was Chief Hydrologist for the
U.S. Geological Survey. Measurements are in traditional English units.
*
Management: River Basin Commissions.
* [
2] > for river discharge / runoff data
* [
3] > for worldwide realized and projected dam projects
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