North Tyne The Ordnance Survey records 'the source of the
North Tyne river' at grid reference NY 605974 at Deadwater, a few tens of metres short of the Scottish border. It flows southeast through the village of
Kielder before entering first
Bakethin Reservoir and then
Kielder Water, both set within
Kielder Forest. It then passes by the village of
Bellingham before the
River Rede enters as a left-bank tributary at
Redesmouth. It passes
Hadrian's Wall near
Chollerford before joining the South Tyne near Warden to the northwest of Hexham.
South Tyne The
South Tyne rises at Tyne Head on
Alston Moor,
Cumbria close to the sources of the
Tees and the
Wear. Initially it flows north through the
North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), enters Northumberland downstream of Alston and turns to the east as it approaches the town of
Haltwhistle. Paralleling Hadrian's Wall which lies to the north, the river continues past
Redburn and
Haydon Bridge to join the North Tyne at Warden. This low level east-west corridor through the Pennines is referred to as the Tyne Gap.
Tyne From the
confluence of the North and South Tyne at Warden, the river flows east through Northumberland by Hexham,
Corbridge and
Prudhoe and enters the county of
Tyne and Wear to the east of
Wylam. The river subsequently forms the boundary between
Newcastle upon Tyne on the north bank and the
Borough of Gateshead on the south bank for , in the course of which it flows under ten bridges. To the east of Gateshead and Newcastle, the Tyne divides
Hebburn and
Jarrow on the south bank from
Walker and
Wallsend on the north bank, forming the boundary between the boroughs of
North Tyneside and
South Tyneside. The
Tyne Tunnel runs under the river to link Jarrow and Wallsend and is roughly where the mouth of the
River Don forms. Finally the river flows between
South Shields and
Tynemouth into the
North Sea. ==Geography==