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  2. River mouth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_mouth

    A river mouth is where a river flows into a larger body of water, such as another river, a lake/reservoir, a bay/gulf, a sea, or an ocean. [1] At the river mouth, sediments are often deposited due to the slowing of the current, reducing the carrying capacity of the water. [1] The water from a river can enter the receiving body in a variety of ...

  3. Indo-European vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_vocabulary

    Nor óss "river mouth" ōs, ōris "mouth" (> oral) Ved ā́s "mouth, face" Av āh "mouth" OCS usta "mouth" Lith úostas "mouth of a river, harbor" OIr ...

  4. River source - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_source

    The headwater of a river or stream is the point on each of its tributaries upstream from its mouth/estuary into a lake/sea or its confluence with another river. Each headwater is considered one of the river's sources , as it is the place where surface runoffs from rainwater , meltwater and/or spring water begin accumulating into a more ...

  5. Tributary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tributary

    The water basin of the Wabash River; the other rivers (not including the Ohio River) are tributaries of the Wabash River. The Vermillion River (and its forks) is a highlighted example of a tributary of the Wabash River. The Wabash River is also a tributary of the Ohio River, which in turn is a tributary of the Mississippi River.

  6. Stream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stream

    Although each tributary has its own source, international practice is to take the source farthest from the river mouth as the source of the entire river system, from which the most extended length of the river measured as the starting point is taken as the length of the whole river system, [46] and that furthest starting point is conventionally ...

  7. Estuary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estuary

    River delta – Silt deposition landform at the mouth of a river; Shell growth in estuaries; Tidal bore – A water wave traveling upstream a river or narrow bay because of an incoming tide; Tidal prism – Volume of water in an estuary or inlet between mean high tide and mean low tide

  8. Confluence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confluence

    A confluence can occur in several configurations: at the point where a tributary joins a larger river ; or where two streams meet to become the source of a river of a new name (such as the confluence of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, forming the Ohio River); or where two separated channels of a river (forming a river island) rejoin at ...

  9. River delta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_delta

    A river delta is so named because the shape of the Nile Delta approximates the triangular uppercase Greek letter delta.The triangular shape of the Nile Delta was known to audiences of classical Athenian drama; the tragedy Prometheus Bound by Aeschylus refers to it as the "triangular Nilotic land", though not as a "delta". [8]