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river
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river

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The course of a river from its source of a spring or melting glacier, through to maturity where it flows into the sea.
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Some of the animals and plants that are likely to be found in a slow-moving British river.
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An urban river, the River Wandle, which flows through southwest London, England. In most developed countries natural rivers are now rare. Many lowland rivers have been significantly altered by engineering. Rivers have been straightened, widened, and deepened, and their banks have been built up. This is to protect urban residents and businesses from flooding. They do this by removing the water from the urban area as quickly as possible. Wider, deeper rivers can remove more water than small, narrow ones.
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A river runs through a steep-sided rift valley at Thingvellir, in Iceland. In this area, the North American plate is pulling away from the European plate at an annual rate of 2 cm/0.8 in. It is part of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, a constructive plate boundary where new material is formed by the cooling of lava.
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The Bow River in Banff National Park, southern Alberta, Canada. Famous for its trout fishing, and an important source of hydroelectric power, the Bow rises in the Canadian Rockies at the foot of Mount Gordon. It flows southeast for 587 km/365 mi, running through Calgary before its confluence with the Oldman, at which point it becomes the South Saskatchewan River.

Large body of water that flows down a slope along a channel restricted by adjacent banks and levees. A river starts at a point called its source, and enters a sea or lake at its mouth. Along its length it may be joined by smaller rivers called tributaries; a river and its tributaries are contained within a drainage basin. The point at which two rivers join is called the confluence.

Rivers are formed and moulded over time chiefly by the processes of erosion, and by the transport and deposition of sediment. Rivers are able to work on the landscape through erosion, transport, and deposition. The amount of potential energy available to a river is proportional to its initial height above sea level. A river follows the path of least resistance downhill, and deepens, widens and lengthens its channel by erosion. Up to 95% of a river's potential energy is used to overcome friction.

One way of classifying rivers is by their stage of development. An upper course is typified by a narrow V-shaped valley with numerous waterfalls, lakes, and rapids. Because of the steep gradient of the topography and the river's height above sea level, the rate of erosion is greater than the rate of deposition, and downcutting occurs by vertical corrasion (erosion or abrasion of the bed or bank caused by the load carried by the river).

In the middle course of a river, the topography has been eroded over time and the river's course has a shallow gradient. Such a river is said to be graded. Erosion and deposition are delicately balanced as the river meanders (gently curves back and forth) across the extensive flood plain. Horizontal corrasion is the main process of erosion. The flood plain is an area of periodic flooding along the course of a river valley where fine silty material called alluvium is deposited by the flood water. Features of a mature river (or the lower course of a river) include extensive meanders, oxbow lakes, and braiding.

Many important flood plains, such as the Nile flood plain in Egypt, occur in arid areas where their exceptional fertility is very important to the local economy. However, using flood plains as the site of towns and villages involves a certain risk, and it is safer to use flood plains for other uses, such as agriculture and parks. Water engineers can predict when flooding is likely and take action to prevent it by studying hydrographs, which show how the discharge of a river varies with time.

Major rivers of the world include the Ganges, the Mississippi, and the Nile, the world's longest river.

The US White House issued a list of 15 ‘American Heritage Rivers’ in July 1998 as the first step in providing federal funds for areas that wish to clean up their local rivers. The ones chosen are the Blackstone River in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, the Connecticut in New England, the Cuyahoga in Ohio, the Detroit in Michigan, the Hanalei in Hawaii, the Hudson in New York, the Lackawanna in Pennsylvania, the Mississippi, the New River in North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, the Potomac in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia, the Rio Grande in Texas, the St Johns in Florida, the Upper Susquehanna in Pennsylvania, the Williamette in Oregon, and the Woonasquatucket in Massachusetts and Rhode Island.



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He added: "We've been sold down the river - literally - by the Environment Agency.
Is J Simpson happy with how these onceefficient customer-friendly companies are now performing, and does he want the Royal Mail to be carved up and sold down the river like countless other British companies, just to make a quick profit for government and shareholders?
Community leader Bernard Caine, 67, said: "We are very disappointed that we have been sold down the river.
 
 
 
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