• The
Casiquiare canal splits off from the
Orinoco (an east-flowing river in northern
Venezuela that empties into the
Caribbean Sea) and heads south to join the
Rio Negro, an enormous south-flowing river that eventually joins the
Amazon River. The canal therefore provides a navigable channel between the large Orinoco basin and the enormous Amazon basin. The resulting landmass bounded by these rivers is also known as
Guiana Island. • Canada's aptly-named
Divide Creek splits into two branches near
Kicking Horse Pass on the Alberta–British Columbia border at the
North American continental divide. One branch flows west to the Pacific Ocean; the other flows east and eventually reaches the Atlantic Ocean via
Hudson Bay. • Similarly, at
Two Ocean Pass in
Wyoming, United States, further south along the same continental divide, North Two Ocean Creek splits at the
Parting of the Waters. One creek is called the Atlantic Creek, which flows east to the
Gulf of Mexico via the
Yellowstone,
Missouri and
Mississippi Rivers; the other is called
Pacific Creek, which flows west to the
Pacific Ocean via the
Snake and
Columbia Rivers. • The
Hase River in Melle, Germany divides into the Hase River and the
Else River and has been researched as a natural phenomenon. • A bifurcation of the
Nerodime River in
Kosovo, near the town of
Ferizaj, at , was a hydrological curiosity as separate streams flowed into the
Aegean and the
Black Sea. The Nerodime bifurcation was the first hydrological protected object in the
former Yugoslavia (1979). The Nerodime bifurcation is a strict wildlife sanctuary, category I according to
IUCN, with an area of 13.0 ha (about 32 acres). This bifurcation is considered to be an artificial phenomenon, but created under extremely favorable natural conditions. • In the past, the small
Kalaus River in south-western Russia, when reaching the
thalweg of the Kuma-Manych Depression at , would split, the two distributaries becoming the headwaters of the
West and East Manych Rivers. The former flows west into the
Don River and eventually into the
Sea of Azov, while the latter flows east, and is lost in the steppe before ever reaching the
Caspian Sea. However a dam was built, preventing water from flowing from the Kalaus into the East Manych; thus the Kalaus is now the source of the West Manych only. • The
Bahr Yussef is a channel which splits off the west side of the
Nile and drains into the
Birket Qarun, an
inland sea in the
Fayum Depression. Originally a natural bifurcation for flood waters, its flow was increased by canalisation in the
12th Dynasty (about 1900 BC). Around 230 BC, the channel of the Nile from which it came (itself a bifurcation) dried up, but has since been fed by a new canal to allow water again to make it from the Nile to
Al Fayyum. The entire waterway is over 300 km long, consisting of modern canals taking Nile water from
Asyut to
Dairut, the old Nile channel then runs alongside the Nile for over 150 km to
Lahun, then the Ancient Egyptian canal carries the water into the
Fayum Depression. • In
Suriname, the
Wayombo and
Arrawarra split, the first flowing into the
Coppename, the second into the
Nickerie. • The
Swedish side of
Torne River has a distributary called the
Tärendö River, which on average transports 57% of the water of the Torne River into the
Kalix River. • The
Barak River splits into two major rivers at the India-Bangladesh border. • The
Karnali River bifurcates in
Nepal and the two parts rejoin after flowing into
India for 80 kilometers. • In
Louisiana, the
Mississippi River bifurcates into the
Atchafalaya River. The Atchafalaya is 137 miles long and is the fifth largest river in
North America, by discharge. • In
The Netherlands, the
IJssel is a
distributary of the
Rhine. With a length of around 127 kilometers, it is the longest river to start and end within The Netherlands. Unlike the Rhine, which flows into the
North Sea, it flows into the
IJsselmeer. • The
Kings River in the
California Central Valley splits into two distributaries, of which one reaches the Pacific Ocean, with the other being
endorheic. • ,
Neuquén,
Argentina • The Selinda Spillway of the
Cuando River of
Angola,
Namibia and
Botswana •
Slims River (extinct): In the spring of 2016 a melting glacier diverted most of the Slims River from the
Bering Sea to the
Gulf of Alaska watershed • The
Echimamish River in Canada connects the
Hayes and
Nelson rivers and was much used as a shortcut by voyageurs. • The
Chu River in
Kyrgyzstan flows east to within a few kilometres of
Lake Issyk-Kul, makes a hairpin turn, and flows west without entering the lake. During floods, water from the river previously flowed into the lake, but this has not happened since the
Orto-Tokoy Reservoir was built. ==See also==