Triple divide


A triple divide or triple watershed is a point on Earth's surface where three drainage basins meet. A triple divide results from the intersection of two drainage divides. Triple divides range from prominent mountain peaks to minor side peaks, down to simple slope changes on a ridge which are otherwise unremarkable. The elevation of a triple divide can be thousands of meters to barely above sea level. Triple divides are a common hydrographic feature of any terrain that has rivers, streams and/or lakes.
Topographic triple divides do not necessarily respect the underground path of water. Thus, depending on the infiltration and the different geological layers, the hydrologic triple divide is often offset from the topographic triple divide.
A hydrological apex is a triple divide whose waters flow into three different oceans. Depending on definition, Triple Divide Peak in the U.S. state of Montana, or Snow Dome in Canada are the only such places on Earth.

Africa

An unnamed hill on the border between the Central African Republic and South Sudan: the exact point is at. Water from this point flows to the Atlantic Ocean via the Congo River, to the Mediterranean Sea via the Nile, or to endorheic Lake Chad. At this point meet the second, third and eighth largest drainage basins in the world, making it one of the most important triple divides on earth.

Antarctica

Antarctica is completely circled by the Southern Ocean, and has no triple divides.
Older definitions of the oceans did not include the Southern Ocean, and instead had the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans touch the shores of Antarctica. Based on this outdated definition, Dome Argus is the highest point in the East Antarctic ice sheet and could be considered a triple divide if it is assumed that the ice forms a watershed.

Asia

Asia is dominated by endorheic basins. In Northeastern Mongolia, the endoheric basin meets the watersheds of the Selenga and the Amur, rivers that flow to the Arctic and the Pacific Ocean, respectively. In Tibet, the basin meets the watersheds of the Nu and the Yangtze, rivers that flow to the Indian and the Pacific Ocean, respectively.

Australia

Australia has two continental drainage divide tripoints, both close to each other along Queensland's Great Dividing Range. Both are named after two 1845 exploration party leaders who sought to solve the question of Australia's rivers, Thomas Mitchell and Edmund Kennedy.
Landmark nameCoordinatesLocationWatershedsDividesRefs
Lunghin PassPiz Lunghin, Switzerland
KlepáčKrálický Sněžník Mountains, Czech Republic and Poland
  • North Sea
  • Black Sea
  • Baltic Sea
  • Unnamed pointLangres, France
  • North Sea
  • English Channel
  • Mediterranean Sea
  • WitenwasserenstockValais and Uri, Switzerland
  • North Sea
  • Adriatic Sea
  • Mediterranean Sea
  • Roundway HillDevizes, Wiltshire, United Kingdom
  • North Sea
  • English Channel
  • Atlantic Ocean
  • North America

    North America has 3 triple divides in the United States which are intersections of continental divides, and a fourth one in British Columbia. Waters at these triple divides flow into three different oceans, seas or gulfs. Triple Divide Peak in Montana is considered the triple divide "hydrological apex" of North America, though Snow Dome on the Alberta-British Columbia border also has a claim depending on how the Arctic and Atlantic oceans are defined. North America is the only continent that has a triple point dividing basins draining into three different oceans. Where the Continental Divide splits and joins to form the boundary of the Great Divide Basin, it forms two triple points.
    Landmark nameCoordinatesLocationWatershedsDividesRefs
    Triple Divide PeakFlathead County, Montana
    Continental Divide of the Americas and Laurentian Divide
    Snow DomeAlberta and British Columbia
  • Pacific Ocean
  • Arctic Ocean
  • Hudson Bay
  • Continental Divide of the Americas and Arctic Divide
    Unnamed hillPotter County, Pennsylvania
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • Atlantic Ocean
  • Saint Lawrence River
  • Eastern Continental Divide and Saint Lawrence River Divide
    Hill of Three Watersapproximately north of Hibbing, Minnesota
  • Hudson Bay
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • Saint Lawrence River
  • Around Haines City, Florida
  • Kissimmee River
  • St John's River
  • Peace River
  • Lake Okeechobee basin and the Eastern Continental Divide
    Great Divide BasinWyoming, where the Continental Divide splits and joins to form the boundary of the Great Divide Basin
  • Pacific Ocean
  • Atlantic Ocean
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • Guzmán Basin
  • Continental Divide of the Americas, Great Divide Basin
    Chihuahua rim, Guzmán BasinChihuahua, Mexico
  • Pacific Ocean
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • Guzmán Basin
  • Continental Divide of the Americas, Great Divide Basin
    Three Waters MountainWyoming
  • Gulf of California
  • Pacific Ocean
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • Continental Divide of the Americas, Unnamed Divide
    Commissary Ridge triple divideWyoming
  • Gulf of California
  • Pacific Ocean
  • Great Basin
  • Other points are often considered to be triple divides because they separate basins of continental rivers.
    • Headwaters Hill in Saguache County, Colorado, near Chester. This point has only a weak claim to being a continental triple divide because both the Rio Grande and Arkansas Rivers flow into the Gulf of Mexico.
    The highest elevation significant triple divide in the lower 48 states of the United States, in Kings Canyon National Park in Fresno/Inyo counties, California, is a sub-peak of Mount Wallace of the central Sierra Nevada:
    • Crumbly Spire or Mount Wallace South Peak, Fresno/Inyo counties, California
    Numerous other triple divide points result from intersection of river basin divides, including:
    There are triple points in South America where the divide splits.