Does Antarctica have any ‘rivers’? Or does all the snow just stay there
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The glaciers and ice flow down to the ocean, here you can see the velocity of the ice there are a couple red streaks that could be called streams but they aren’t the long narrow fast moving streams we’d call a river.
This is fascinating to see pictured!
I’d love to see a version expanded to the top 10.
top 26: https://live.staticflickr.com/5551/32212605922_ce300694e5_o.jpg
all of them: https://decolonialatlas.files.wordpress.com/2017/04/world-watersheds.png
too bad they aren’t ranked by size. Also not as pretty as the OP.
Oh jeez Europe only has one significant one and it does not cover as much as expected.
Yeah I’d love to see more. The major rivers of China as well as the Niger and St. Lawrence would be awesome.
eurasia, are you even trying?
It depends on how you define a river. This map displays Rio de la Plata as a river, but that’s debateable, officially it’s an estuary. If you separate Parana and Uruguay rivers, than the Ob river basin in Asia is bigger than any of those.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_drainage_basins_by_area
Mountains not conveniently arranged along the edges of the continent 😤. Who designed this shit?
Plate tectonics. Blame PT.
Sorry, I’m not familiar, what is the measurement M km2?
Million kilometers squared
1Mkm² ≈ 33 Belgiums ≈ 247M football pitches ≈ 1549806949806949 sq. in
How many bananas is that?
At least seven.
It’s wild how close the Amazon river basin comes to the west coast of the continent without draining into the ocean on that side.
Well, there’s a little bunch of hills over there blocking it.
I read somewhere that the Amazon River used to run from east to west until about 6 million years ago when the Andes Mountains developed, reversing the course
The Andes blocking all the good stuff from going into Peru, Bolivia and Chile
Why use Mercator?
The Nile basin extends much further south of Lakes Victoria and Tanganyika than I would have imagined.