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  2. Locks and weirs on the River Thames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locks_and_weirs_on_the...

    Many locks also have moorings that can be used overnight, and some include electric charging points for electric powered boats. All the locks have obvious access from the Thames Path, except for Whitchurch Lock which is within an island and only accessible by boat; Cookham Lock requires a 1km diversion from the Thames Path; and Marlow Lock ...

  3. Tideway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tideway

    River traffic around Waterloo Pier in 2008 The Thames Lock on the Grand Union Canal at Brentford in 2005. The River is navigable to large ocean-going ships as far as the Pool of London at London Bridge. The Port of London is the United Kingdom's second largest port by tonnage. [3] Today, little commercial traffic passes above the Thames Barrier.

  4. Port of Tilbury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_Tilbury

    The Port of Tilbury lies on the north shore of the River Thames, 25 miles (40 km) downstream of London Bridge, at a point where the river makes a loop southwards, and where its width narrows to 800 yards (730 m). The loop is part of the Thames lower reaches: within the meander was a huge area of marshland.

  5. Template:River Thames routemap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:River_Thames_routemap

    Locks and bridges that have prominence in regulating the river; Other structures to identify prominent towns that have not been identified. Non-tidal rivers that have an average discharge of more than 1 m 3 /s; Canals; The conversion 1 sea mile = 6080 ft was obtained by calculation from the Port of London handbook (see below).

  6. River Thames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Thames

    Below Teddington Lock (about 55 mi or 89 km upstream of the Thames Estuary), the river is subject to tidal activity from the North Sea. Before the lock was installed, the river was tidal as far as Staines, about 16 mi (26 km) upstream. [33] London, capital of Roman Britain, was established on two hills, now known as Cornhill and Ludgate Hill ...

  7. Teddington Lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teddington_Lock

    The greater lock is against the general south (right, towpath or Surrey) bank of the river which is for 500 m north-east here [n 2]; a middle lock being that most regularly used spans a long thin island which has lawns, places for boat owners to sit and a lock keeper's cabin and short thin island which is a thin wedge of concrete and a broad canoe/kayak stepped portage facility.

  8. Port of London - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_London

    The Port of London is that part of the River Thames in England lying between Teddington Lock and the defined boundary (since 1968, a line drawn from Foulness Point in Essex via Gunfleet Old Lighthouse to Warden Point in Kent) [1] with the North Sea and including any associated docks. [2]

  9. Sandford Lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandford_Lock

    The lock has the deepest fall of all locks on the Thames at 8 ft 9in (2.69m) and is connected to a large island which is one of three at this point. The lock lies at the end of Church Lane in Sandford on Thames. Upstream from the lock, the main weir connects the second island to the opposite bank on the Kennington, Oxfordshire side. This is the ...