A valley-floor divide occurs on the bottom of a valley and arises as a result of subsequent depositions, such as
scree, in a valley through which a river originally flowed continuously. Examples include the
Kartitsch Saddle in the
Gail valley in
East Tyrol, which forms the watershed between the
Drau and the Gail, and the divides in the
Toblacher Feld between
Innichen and
Toblach in
Italy, where the
Drau empties into the
Black Sea and the
Rienz into the
Adriatic. Settlements are often built on valley-floor divides in the Alps. Examples are
Eben im Pongau,
Kirchberg in Tirol and
Waidring (In all of these, the village name indicates the pass and the watershed is even explicitly displayed in the coat of arms). Extremely low divides with heights of less than two metres are found on the
North German Plain within the
Urstromtäler, for example, between
Havel and
Finow in the
Eberswalde Urstromtal. In marsh deltas such as the
Okavango, the largest drainage area on earth, or in large lakes areas, such as the
Finnish Lakeland, it is difficult to find a meaningful definition of a watershed. A
bifurcation is where the watershed is effectively in a river bed, in a wetland, or underground. The largest watershed of this type is the bifurcation of the
Orinoco in the north of
South America, whose main stream empties into the
Caribbean, but which also drains into the South Atlantic via the
Casiquiare canal and
Amazon River. ==Political boundaries==