Maas (Meuse - Beneden Maas (Lower Meuse), south side of the Barrage de Lixhe)

The Maas (Meuse - Beneden Maas (Lower Meuse), south side of the Barrage de Lixhe) is a large river and is part of the Maas (Meuse).
It runs for 10.33 kilometres from Monsin - Meuse Verbinding (where it joins the Kanaal van Monsin) to Barrage de Lixhe (côté sud) (which is a dead end).
The exact dimensions of the largest boat that can travel on the waterway are not known. The maximum headroom is not known. The maximum draught is not known.
It has a junction with the Kanaal van Haccourt naar Vise at Haccourt - Meuse Verbinding.
Monsin - Meuse Verbinding Junction of the Lower Meuse (Beneden Maas) with the Kanaal van Monsin |
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Pont de Wandre (Meuse) A single-pier cable-stayed bridge |
0.58 kilometres | 0 locks | |
Pont de E40 (Meuse) | 1.80 kilometres | 0 locks | |
Hermalle-sous-Argenteau | 5.78 kilometres | 0 locks | |
Pont de Visé | 8.93 kilometres | 0 locks | |
Haccourt - Meuse Verbinding Junction of the Lower Meuse (Beneden Maas) with the Kanaal Haccourt naar Vise |
8.98 kilometres | 0 locks | |
Pont Ferroviaire de Visé | 9.78 kilometres | 0 locks | |
Barrage de Lixhe (côté sud) South side of the Lixhe weir (limit of navigation) |
10.33 kilometres | 0 locks |
- VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
- The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
There is no page on Wikipedia called “Maas (Meuse - Beneden Maas”
Wikipedia pages that might relate to Maas (Meuse - Beneden Maas
[Meuse]
The Meuse (/mjuːz/ MYOOZ, /mɜːz/, also US: /mɜːrz, mʌz/ MU(R)Z, French: [møz]; Walloon: Moûze [muːs]) or Maas (/mɑːs/ MAHSS, Dutch: [maːs]; Limburgish:
[Nieuwe Maas]
The Nieuwe Maas (Dutch pronunciation: [ˌniu.ə ˈmaːs], "New Meuse") is a distributary of the Rhine River, and a former distributary of the Maas River, in
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[Oude Maas]
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[Afgedamde Maas]
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[Maas–Waal Canal]
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[Beneden Merwede]
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[Meuse-Inférieure]
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[Waal (river)]
"Waal" continued after the confluence with the Meuse. The delta parts now known as Boven Merwede, Beneden Merwede and the upper section of the Noord were