satellite. The village in the lower right of the photo is
Bogny-sur-Meuse; the village in the upper left is
Revin. The Meuse rises in Pouilly-en-Bassigny, commune of
Le Châtelet-sur-Meuse on the
Langres plateau in France from where it flows northwards past
Sedan (the head of
navigation) and
Charleville-Mézières into Belgium. At
Namur it is joined by the
Sambre. Beyond Namur the Meuse winds eastwards and passes
Liège before turning north. The river then forms part of the Belgian-Dutch border, except that at
Maastricht the border lies further to the west. In the Netherlands it continues northwards through
Venlo closely along the border to Germany, then turns towards the west, where it runs parallel to the
Waal and forms part of the extensive
Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta, together with the
Scheldt to its south and the
Rhine to the north. The river has been divided near
Heusden into the
Afgedamde Maas on the right and the
Bergse Maas on the left. The Bergse Maas continues under the name of
Amer, which is part of
De Biesbosch. The Afgedamde Maas joins the Waal, the main stem of the Rhine at
Woudrichem, and then flows under the name of
Boven Merwede to
Hardinxveld-Giessendam, where it splits into
Nieuwe Merwede and
Beneden Merwede. Near
Lage Zwaluwe, the Nieuwe Merwede joins the Amer, forming the
Hollands Diep, which splits into
Grevelingen and
Haringvliet, before finally flowing into the North Sea. The Meuse is crossed by railway bridges between the following stations (on the left and right banks respectively): • Belgium: •
Hasselt (Belgium) –
Maastricht (Netherlands) • Netherlands: •
Weert -
Roermond •
Blerick –
Venlo •
Cuijk – Mook-Molenhoek •
Ravenstein –
Wijchen •
's-Hertogenbosch –
Zaltbommel There are also numerous road bridges and around 32 ferry crossings. The Meuse is navigable over a substantial part of its total length: In the Netherlands and Belgium, the river is part of the major inland navigation infrastructure, connecting the Rotterdam-Amsterdam-Antwerp port areas to the industrial areas upstream: 's-Hertogenbosch, Venlo, Maastricht, Liège, Namur. Between Maastricht and
Maasbracht, an unnavigable section of the Meuse is bypassed by the
Juliana Canal. South of Namur, further upstream, the river can only carry more modest vessels, although a barge as long as . can still reach the French border town of Givet. From Givet, the river is canalized over a distance of . The canalized Meuse used to be called the "Canal de l'Est — Branche Nord" but was recently rebaptized into "Canal de la Meuse". The waterway can be used by the smallest barges that are still in use commercially almost long and just over wide. Just upstream of the town of Commercy, the Canal de la Meuse connects with the
Marne–Rhine Canal by means of a short diversion canal. The Cretaceous sea reptile
Mosasaurus is named after the river Meuse. The first fossils of it were discovered outside Maastricht in 1780. ==Basin area==