Major rivers of the United Kingdom
This is a list of the longest rivers of the United Kingdom.
== lRivers of the United Kingdom==
Rank | River | Length (miles) | Length (km) | Mean Flow (m3/s)[1] | Mouth | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | River Severn[2] | 220 | 354 | 107.4 | Severn Estuary | Wales/England |
2 | River Thames[2] | 215 | 346 | 65.4 | Thames Estuary | England |
3 | River Trent[2] | 185 | 297 | 89.0 | The Humber | England |
4 | River Wye[3] | 155 | 250 | 73.1 | Severn Estuary | Wales/England |
5 | River Great Ouse[2] | 143 | 230 | 15.6 | The Wash | England |
6 | River Ure/River Ouse, Yorkshire | 129 | 208 | 69.8 | The Humber | England |
7 | River Tay[2] | 117 | 188 | 179.0 | Firth of Tay | Scotland |
8 | River Clyde | 109 | 176 | 48.5 | Firth of Clyde | Scotland |
9 | River Spey | 107 | 172 | 65.7 | Moray Firth | Scotland |
10 | River Nene[2] | 100 | 161 | 9.3 | The Wash | England |
11 | River Bann / Lough Neagh | 99 | 159 | 92.2 | Atlantic Ocean | Northern Ireland |
12 | River Tweed[2] | 96 | 155 | 81.7 | North Sea | Scotland/England |
13 | River Avon, Warwickshire | 96 | 154 | 17.3 | River Severn* | England |
14 | River Eden, Cumbria | 90 | 145 | 53.7 | Solway Firth | England |
15 | River Dee, Aberdeenshire | 87 | 140 | 47.8 | North Sea | Scotland |
16 | River Witham | 82 | 132 | 5.2 | The Wash | England |
17 | River Teme | 81 | 130 | 18.2 | River Severn* | Wales/England |
18 | River Don, Aberdeenshire[2] | 80 | 129 | 21.3 | North Sea | Scotland |
19 | River Foyle | 80 | 129 | 58.8 | Atlantic Ocean | Northern Ireland/Republic of Ireland |
20 | River Usk[4] | 78 | 125 | 28.6 | Mouth of the Severn | Wales |
21 | River Teifi[5] | 76 | 122 | 29.5 | Cardigan Bay | Wales |
22 | River Tywi | 75 | 121 | 39.9 | Carmarthen Bay | Wales |
23 | River Ribble | 75 | 120 | 34.0 | Irish Sea | England |
24 | River Avon, Bristol | 75 | 120 | 22.2 | Mouth of the Severn | England |
25 | River Tyne[2] | 73 | 118 | 45.2 | North Sea | England |
26 | River Derwent, Yorkshire | 72 | 115 | 17.4 | River Ouse, Yorkshire | England |
27 | River Aire | 71 | 114 | 36.5 | River Ouse, Yorkshire | England |
28 | River Nith | 71 | 114 | 36.5 | Solway Firth | Scotland |
29 | River Tees | 70 | 113 | 22.2 | North Sea | England |
30 | River Medway | 70 | 113 | 11.7 | Thames Estuary | England |
31 | River Mersey | 70 | 113 | 37.1 | Irish Sea | England |
32 | River Dee, Wales[2] | 70 | 112 | 34.1 | Dee Estuary | Wales/England |
33 | River Don, South Yorkshire | 70 | 112 | 16.3 | River Ouse, Yorkshire | England |
34 | River Wear | 60 | 97 | North Sea | England | |
35 | River Aln | 25 | 40 | North Sea | England | |
36 | River Allen, Dorset | 14 | 23 | River Stour | England | |
37 | River Allen, Northumberland | 5 | 8 | River Tyne | England|
Where a river ends in an estuary the conventional British approach has been to treat the river as ending at the end of the administrative zone. Thus the Severn ends at the mouth of the Bristol Avon and the Thames at the Yantlet Line. The currently accepted end of the Severn Estuary is about 18.5 miles (29.8 km) further, and the Port of London's authority stretches now to Margate, 30 miles (48 km) further. Other countries have different conventions, making comparisons of limited value. Those rivers which empty into other (non-tidal sections of) rivers are indicated in the table thus*. In Yorkshire, the Aire, Derwent and Don all empty into a tidal section of the Yorkshire Ouse. The figures for mean flow are derived from those offered up by the National River Flow Archive, in particular the flow measured at the lowermost gauging stations on each named watercourse. Sometimes the figures of further downstream tributaries are combined with those of the main stem river to provide a more realistic flow figure for the lowermost non-tidal stretch of a watercourse. Some major UK rivers (in terms of flow) are omitted from the list above simply because they are also short. See also
References
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