where do rivers start? Can we trace rivers to a spot where it starts to pour out like a tap?

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where do rivers start? Can we trace rivers to a spot where it starts to pour out like a tap?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

There’s a natural spring that is the headwater of the Sacramento River in California. I went to it and filled up my water bottle from there: literally water gushing out from pure rock. Check this out: https://www.msrec.org/headwaters-spring

Anonymous 0 Comments

In some rivers yes, this is what a spring is. Water gathers together underground in a water table, when there is too much water in that reservoir it can come up out of the ground like that. But not all rivers are like that either

Anonymous 0 Comments

By convention, the source of a river is considered the spring or glacier or other place where water first starts flowing over land that is farthest from where the river empties into a sea or ocean, in the opposite direction from how the river flows out of the mouth.

For example, the Nile runs northwards and empties into the Mediterranean, so its source is considered to be the spring that contributes to the river that is the farthest south (although the guys from Top Gear did an episode where they decided that the Mediterranean was a continuation of the Nile and since it connects to the Atlantic in the west, then the source of the Nile must be the tributary to Lake Victoria that is farthest east, which was just a muddy little spring coming out from under a big rock).

All the other springs and streams and rivers that add to the main river are considered just tributaries and often have their own names, if any name at all.

As for the ultimate source of the water, springs are usually fed by rainfall within certain areas that drain through the ground to a particular point where the water resurfaces. So, the ultimate source is rainfall, except in the case of snowpack or glaciers, where the source is snow (obviously).