{"id":14210,"date":"2024-03-15T14:10:26","date_gmt":"2024-03-15T13:10:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/?p=14210"},"modified":"2024-03-15T14:10:26","modified_gmt":"2024-03-15T13:10:26","slug":"where-does-the-nile-river-empty","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/where-does-the-nile-river-empty\/","title":{"rendered":"Where Does The Nile River Empty"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Where does the Nile River Empty?<\/h2>\n

The Nile is a 6,670-kilometer long river that runs from central Africa to the Mediterranean Sea and is the longest river in the world. It has its source in the mountains of the East African Rift System and its delta empties into the Mediterranean Sea in Egypt.<\/p>\n

The Nile is considered by many historians and archeologists to be the lifeline of Ancient Egypt, and its importance to the region cannot be overstated. For thousands of years, many Egyptian communities have been sustained by the river, which provides them with water, food, transportation and trade. The Nile supports many species of fish and wildlife and is an important resource for many land-based activities.<\/p>\n

Maps made by Ancient Egyptians, however, seem to indicate that at one point the Nile actually ran into a different part of the Mediterranean Sea. Some experts believe that before the Aswan High Dam was built and the waterflow was redirected, the Nile Delta covered a much smaller area. As a result, the river likely emptied into a bay to the east of Alexandria, instead of the modern-day delta. This could help to explain why there are several references to a “Lake of the Pharaohs” on old maps, which may have been a shallow body of water that extended eastward in the former delta.<\/p>\n

In the present day, however, the Nile Delta is quite large and is formed by the intersection of two branches: the Rosetta Branch, which originates in Syria and runs along the Nile Valley until it reaches the Nile Delta in northern Egypt; and the Damietta Branch, which originates in western Sudan and runs along the Nile Valley until it reaches the Delta in England. The two branches meet in a delta fan known as the Deltaic Wharf, which is where the mouth of the Nile opens up and empties into the Mediterranean Sea.<\/p>\n