Waterfall
- See Waterfall, New South Wales for the suburb of Sydney, Australia

A
waterfall is usually a geological formation resulting from a
stream flowing over an
erosion-resistant rock formation that forms a sudden break in elevation. Waterfalls may also be artificial, and they are sometimes used for
garden and
landscape ornament.
Some waterfalls form in montane environments where erosion is rapid and stream courses may be subject to sudden and catastrophic change. In such cases, the waterfall may not be the end product of many years of water action over a region, but rather the result of relatively sudden geological processes such as thrust faults or
volcanic action.
Most waterfalls are the result of many years of action of water on the underlying strata. Typically, a stream will flow across an area of formations, and more resistant rock strata will form shelves across the streamway, elevated above the further stream bed when the less erosion-resistant rock around it disappears. Over a period of years, the edges of this shelf will gradually break away and the waterfall will steadily move upstream. Often, the rock strata just below the more resistant shelf will be of a softer type, and will erode out to form a shallow cave-like formation known as a
rock shelter (also known as a rock house) under and behind the waterfall.
Streams often become wider and more shallow just above waterfalls due to flowing over the rock shelf, and there is usually a deep pool just below the waterfall due to the kinetic energy of the water hitting the bottom.
Waterfalls are a hindrance to river transportation. The
Welland Canal was built in
1829 to allow ships to pass Niagara Falls in the
Great Lakes.

Notable waterfalls include:\n*
Angel Falls, the world's highest at 979 m (3230 ft), in
Venezuela in
South America\n*
Victoria Falls, the world's largest, in
Africa, on the
Zambezi River on the border between
Zambia and
Zimbabwe\n*
Boyoma Falls, the world's highest volume, 17,000 m³/s (600,000 ft³/s),
Congo River,
Congo \n*
Yosemite Falls, the tallest in North America in
Yosemite National Park in
California,
United States.\n*
Niagara Falls, the best-known in
North America, located on the
Niagara River on the border between
New York,
United States, and
Ontario,
Canada\n*
Iguaçú Falls, in
South America, on the Iguaçu River on the border between
Brazil and
Argentina\n*
Cumberland Falls, a
North American waterfall advertised to have a "moonbow"; located in southeast
Kentucky\n*
Rhine Falls,
Europe's largest, located in
Switzerland\n*
Reichenbach Falls,
Switzerland, total drop 250 m (656 ft), at 90 m (300 ft) the Upper Reichenbach Falls is one of the highest cataracts in the
Alps. Scene of the final fictional meeting between
Sherlock Holmes and Professor Moriarty.\n*
Saint Anthony Falls, the only waterfall on the
Mississippi River.
See also:
List of waterfalls
External link
\n*World Waterfall Database
Category:Landforms\nCategory:Rivers
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