(waterway)
111inland waterway — noun 1. : a navigable river, canal, or sound 2. : a system of navigable inland bodies of water usually used in plural …
113Gulf Intracoastal Waterway — …
114canals and inland waterways — ▪ waterway Introduction natural or artificial waterways used for navigation, crop irrigation, water supply, or drainage. Despite modern technological advances in air and ground transportation, inland waterways continue to fill a vital …
115WTWY — Waterway (Academic & Science » Ocean Science) Waterway (Academic & Science » Meteorology) Waterway (Governmental » Transportation) Waterway (Governmental » US Government) Waterway (Governmental » Military) Waterway (Governmental » NASA) …
116Arkansas River Navigation System — ▪ waterway, United States official name Mcclellan Kerr Arkansas River Navigation Systems improved portion of the Verdigris and Arkansas rivers, extending southeastward for 439 mi (767 km) from Catoosa (near Tulsa) in northeastern Oklahoma …
117Chesapeake and Ohio Canal — ▪ waterway, United States former waterway, extending 184.5 miles (297 km) along the east bank of the Potomac River between Washington, D.C., and Cumberland in western Maryland. Begun in 1828, the canal was intended to provide cheap… …
118Mittelland Canal — ▪ waterway, Germany German Mittellandkanal, English Midland Canal German waterway (canals and inland waterways) begun in 1905 and completed in 1938. It extends from the Dortmund Ems Canal east of Rheine, running eastward along the northern… …
119Chambly Canal — ▪ waterway, Canada waterway bypassing a series of rapids on the Richelieu River between the Chambly Basin and Saint Jean sur Richelieu, in Quebec province, Canada. Built between 1833 and 1843 and improved in 1850, it is nearly 12 miles (19… …
120Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal — ▪ waterway, United States U.S. waterway linking the south branch of the Chicago River with the Des Plaines River at Lockport, Illinois. The chief purpose of the canal, conceived in 1885, was to reverse the flow of the Chicago River away… …