No. The Thames is in England, which is on an island. The Rhine is in Germany, in Central Europe.
I think what you mean is 'During the last Ice age Britain was connected to Europe by a land bridge which now forms the bed of the English Channel and southern North Sea. As the mouth of the Themes is in the southern North Sea could the Themes have once flown over the land-bridge to Europe and the into the Rhine?'
The answer is still no because the shape of the land-bridge was the same as the shape of the sea-bed. Therefore the Thames would flow down onto the land bridge but then would have had to flow uphill to what are now the coasts of France and the Netherlands. Instead it would have continued downhill to the coast at the time.
I'm sorry to go into such detail but I wanted you to be sure that the Thames has never been a tributary of the Rhine.
WRONG. The above statment is Totally and Factually incorrect. See any number of learned articles on the geography and geology of the Thames-Rhine river complex during the last sequence of glaciations.
In Brief, when the southern North Sea and English Channel was DRY, due to far lower sea levels, BOTH the Thames and the Rhine flowed down from their respective present coasts into that valley/land bridge that is now the bed of the North Sea and English Channel and there they joined together, then flowed north into what was then the the "Esturary of the Rhine" as they reached the then sea coast off the present coast of Scotland.
Since the water volume of the Rhine was/is greater than that of the Thames, the primary river is deemed to have been the Rhine, and the Thames to have been the tributary river, just as huge rivers like the Ohio and the Missouri are deemed tributaries of the Mississippi.
The city that was established at the narrowing of the Thames River is London. The Thames River was once the capitals principle transport artery and one of the world's busiest waterways.
you need a statistics team to answer this one. i would say, based on your question, if you mean single vessels most likely a river with a heavy workload of 'punting' a river area anywhere in the world like gondola in Venice or punts in oxford or cambridge . Or if you mean large ships coming and going, doing passenger and cargo runs it would have been the thames once but i would image its it china because of their sheer amount of export. I don't think they do a 'census' of river traffic, not on a large corellatable scale. i mean really, who could be bothered XD
There are no capital cities directly on the Rhine river. There used to be Bonn (capital of West Germany), but it lost its capital status when the Berlin wall came down and Germany was united.
London was once a small village on the banks of the River Thames. Who the first inhabitants were is unknown.
Only once! The M25 ends at the Dartford Crossing, when it becomes the A282 for both the Dartford Tunnel and the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge.
It is uncertain if the River Thames is named after anyone. Before the Romans arrived, it was known as the 'Tems'. The Romans gave it the Latin version 'Tamesis'. Several names have appeared since that time. In Anglo-Saxon times, the name 'Tamyse' was popular. Nevertheless, it has been known as 'Thames' since c.1600. ADDED: British rivers are not named after people; in fact I think this is normal world-wide. If you can trace the etymology you usually find exotic-sounding geographical names were originally very mundane words just identifying bits of local geography. For example, there are three separate River Avons in England - and 'avon' means.... 'river'. I read something once, in an American geology web-site, that seemed to suggest "Mississippi" means "Big Muddy River". Loses a bit in translation, doesn't it?
It indicates Conrad's fear that the Thames might someday revert to a state of "mindless frenzy."
Mekong River
The Yellow River or Huang He / Hwang Ho River.
Mekong River
Euphrates River.
Description Of One Of The Main Characters: Harris is the funniest of all three men and he is the only one who is not pleased with any work except his own. He misses the boat in the dark. H e once tries to cook for his friends using a sack full of vegetables. He once falls into river Thames while cooking. He tries to speak in monotone forever.