River - Simple English Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Maybe your like
The last part of a river
[change | change source]A river usually ends by flowing into an ocean, a lake or a bigger river. The place where the river flows out into a bigger body of water is called the 'mouth' of the river.
As a river flows towards its mouth, the countryside around the river often changes from hilly to flat. As it flows over the flat land the river becomes wider and slower. A wide slow river is called an 'old river'. An old river often floods across the land after there is lots of rain at the headwaters. An old river slowly builds up its banks on either side; the high banks are called levees. An old river often meanders (twists and turns), and sometimes, after a flood, it leaves lakes behind which are called ox-bows or billabongs. Old rivers are the most useful type of river for growing crops. Corn, rice, fruit, cotton, hay, tobacco and sugar are some of the crops that are grown near old rivers.
The shape of the mouth depends on the conditions of the sea where it flows. If there is a strong tide where the river meets the sea, the river forms an estuary. An estuary is a wide, funnel-like mouth of the river. The fresh water of the river mixes slowly with the salt water, becoming brackish water – somewhat salty water. Many kinds of fish, clams, molluscs and other sealife live at estuaries. Many of the world's largest cities and harbours are at estuaries.
Where a river flows out to the sea, it sometimes flows very slowly through sandy or muddy land, making lots of little islands as it flows. The main stream of the river gets broken into many parts that spread out into a triangle shape like the Greek letter delta. When this happens, it is called the delta of the river. Deltas are often places that are not good for towns or farms but are very good for birds and other wildlife and fishing. Deltas are often made into wildlife reserves. Not all rivers have deltas. There are deltas on the Nile River, the Amazon River, the Mekong River, the Mississippi River and the Danube River.
The Nowitna is an old river with meanders and ox-bow lakes.
The delta of the Ganges River in India
The grassy islands of the Okavango delta are the home of elephants, lions and flamingos.
Cities are often near the mouth of a river.
Tag » Where Do Rivers Usually Begin
-
Where Do Rivers Begin? - Primary Homework Help
-
River | National Geographic Society
-
Source | National Geographic Society
-
What Makes A River? - American Rivers
-
Where Do Most Rivers Begin? - WorldAtlas
-
Where Do Most Rivers Usually Begin - Realonomics
-
How Does A River Start? - Young People's Trust For The Environment
-
How Do Rivers Form? - DK Find Out!
-
Where Do Many Rivers Begin? - Micro B Life
-
Basic Geography Of Rivers - ThoughtCo
-
Where Do Rivers Usually Begin? - Sage-Answers
-
River - Wikipedia
-
How Do Rivers Start In Mountains? - Activekyds
-
Rivers - How Water Flows | History | Longest Rivers - English Online