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What is the waterfall with no exit?

Especially, near waterfalls, because of the force of the water and the sand and rocks carried by the river flow. However, the Devil's Kettle Waterfall is special in that this isn't a small, shallow pothole- the bottom cannot be seen. To date, it's true exit point remains (mostly) unknown.



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The water that flows to the east tumbles 50 feet down a cliff and continues toward Lake Superior. The water that flows to the west enters a hole and disappears. Known as Devil's Kettle, this water portal to nowhere has long puzzled Minnesotans.

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The Judge C.R. Magney State Park on Minnesota's north shore of Lake Superior, just a few miles south of the border with Canada, has several waterfalls. One of them has mystified geologists and hikers for decades, Caitlin Schneider reports for Mental Floss — because once the water falls, it simply disappears.

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The Victoria Falls is considered to be the largest waterfall in the world. They are not the widest waterfall or the highest waterfall but with all dimensions taken into account, including almost the largest flow rate, they are considered to be the biggest curtain of falling water in the world.

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A 2400-feet waterfall at the Yosemite National Park takes on the colours of the rainbow at some particular time of the day when the weather is sunny.

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At river mile 179 Prospect Canyon enters on the south side of the river. At the foot of its debris fan sits Lava Falls. The Grand Canyon is a perfect setting for these debris fans. Debris flows are what create them, and these flows primarily occur in arid to semiarid environments.

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Photographers in Yosemite National Park encountered the natural phenomenon known as firefall where lava appears to be flowing over a cliff at sunset.

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Reverse waterfalls occur in nature when strong winds hit cliffs and drive water upwards, instead of allowing them to follow their normal course thanks to gravity. Sightings of these reverse waterfalls are pretty rare and not often documented when they do occur.

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Waterfalls that flow directly into an ocean are known as tidefalls. The breakdown of tidefalls by regions (this list is not by continents) is: three in Africa, seven in Asia, eight in Europe, eight in North America, five in Oceania, and one in South America.

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The name of the town originated from the nearby falls on the Upper Columbia River. The falls, plummeted nearly 50 feet carving out “kettles” in the quartzite rock below. More historic photos can be seen on the Washington Rural Heritage website.

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