zpostcode
What's the largest waterfall in the world?
Jun 1, 2026 9:52 AM

Even our tallest buildings can't rival the staggering size of the world's most iconic waterfalls, which include Niagara Falls on the U.S. border to Canada, Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe and Zambia and Angel Falls in Venezuela.

But which of these is the world's largest waterfall?

Angel Falls is the tallest waterfall on land, measuring 3,212 feet (979 meters) high and 500 feet (150 m) wide at the base, which is similar in size to three Eiffel Towers stacked on top of each other.

But technically, Angel Falls is not the biggest waterfall on Earth. That honor goes to the Denmark Strait cataract, a plunging water mass in the Denmark Strait an ocean channel between Greenland and Iceland meaning the world's biggest, tallest falls are underwater.

This is possible because of the temperature and salinity gradients that power most ocean currents, according to Anna Sanchez Vidal, a professor of marine science at the University of Barcelona in Spain. The Denmark Strait straddles the Arctic Circle and acts as a funnel for polar waters flowing from the Nordic seas into the Atlantic Ocean. But like elsewhere in the ocean, the waters in this region aren't homogeneous.

Related: What's the largest desert in the world?

North of the Denmark Strait, surface waters that come into contact with the frigid Arctic air cool and become saltier as some of the water freezes, leading the salt to be concentrated in the nonfrozen portion. Cold, salty water is denser than warmer water and therefore sinks to the seabed, while the balmier layer rises to the surface. This exchange fuels a deep, icy current flowing southward through the strait and into the Irminger Sea in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Of course, waterfalls always feature a cliff or precipice, and the Denmark Strait is no exception. An 11,500 foot (3,500 m) drop-off in the seafloor near the southern tip of Greenland was carved out by glaciers between 17,500 and 11,500 years ago, during the last ice age. Bottom waters coursing southward through the strait hit the edge of this drop and spill down its slope, forming a cascade that dives beneath the warmer surface waters of the Irminger Sea.

The waters north of the waterfall, which scientists call the Denmark Strait cataract or overflow, are around 1,300 feet (400 m) deep, Sanchez Vidal, who led a research expedition to the strait in July and August 2023, told Live Science. Only the bottom 660 feet (200 m) cascade down the slope, she said, while the rest sits at the surface and mixes with warmer waters flowing northward through the strait. "Half of the water column is overflowing, but half is not," she said.

A diagram showing the Denmark Strait cataract, which is the largest waterfall on Earth.

Although the seabed drops by 11,500 feet, the overflow itself is smaller around 6,600 feet (2,000 m) tall, or double the height of Angel Falls because it lands in a deep pool of cold, dense water. The overflow is impressive, but it doesn't look anything like a waterfall on land, said Mike Clare, leader of marine geosystems at the U.K.'s National Oceanography Centre in Southampton.

For one, the overflow is as wide as the Denmark Strait, which means it stretches across 300 miles (480 kilometers) of seabed. "It's probably dropping about 2,000 meters vertically down into the depths of the Atlantic Ocean but over quite a big distance of something like 500 to 600 kilometers [310 to 370 miles]," Clare told Live Science. "If we visualize it, it looks like a relatively low-gradient slope."

Related: How much does a cloud weigh?

As a result, the water streaming down the overflow reaches speeds of only around 1.6 feet per second (0.5 meter per second) much slower than walking speed and a far cry from the speeds recorded at Niagara Falls, where water plunges down at 68 mph (109 km/h), or 100 feet per second (30.5 m/s).

"If you were down there, you probably wouldn't notice a whole heap going on," Clare said.

The same goes for above the waves, where there are no signs that reveal the underwater cascade, Sanchez Vidal said. "At the surface, you have typical sunny Arctic conditions," she said, and "you cannot see anything from space" except through mapping indicators, such as temperature and salinity.

Iceland map on old atlas.

But looks are deceiving. Cold waters gliding through the Denmark Strait are part of a vital system of ocean currents known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), which carries warm waters north and cold waters south in a long loop within the Atlantic Ocean. After cold water exits the Denmark Strait, it continues its journey south to the Antarctic, then warms up and rises to the surface in a process called upwelling before returning north to complete the cycle in the Arctic.

The AMOC transports much more than water molecules, Clare said. Its cold, bottom currents inject oxygen, nutrients and organic matter into the ocean depths, providing food for a rich array of deep-sea life. The Denmark Strait overflow sits at the base of this life-supporting system so, while "visually it doesn't look that impressive, realistically it is a hugely impressive feature in terms of the role it plays in the global ocean," he said.

RELATED MYSTERIESHow much water is in Earth's crust?

What's the largest ocean that ever existed on Earth?

Which is the largest continent? The smallest?

Unfortunately, the overflow is under threat from climate change, Sanchez Vidal said. Melting ice caps and warming oceans are pumping fresh water into the system and slowing the AMOC, which scientists say is inching closer to a tipping point. Should the AMOC grind to a halt, the Denmark Strait overflow "will decrease in density and it will stop," she said.

The Denmark Strait overflow isn't the only known underwater cascade. In fact, there are features on the seafloor called knickpoints that look a lot more like waterfalls on land, Clare said. Knickpoints often occur on continental margins, where water flows transporting sediments carve out submarine canyons.

"They're actually much faster than the flows we see in the Denmark Strait," he said, "and at the bottom, we do get features a bit like plunge pools that you get in waterfalls."

Comments
Welcome to zpostcode comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Recommend >
Battle of Toulouse
  Battle of Toulouse, the last major engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, fought on April 10, 1814, between the British and French armiez. Fought in southern France, the battle proved that the French were still determined and able to fight, and although it was inconclusive, the British suffered more casualties than the French, leading many historians to consider it a French...
Battle of Santiago de Cuba
  Battle of Santiago de Cuba, concluding naval engagement, of the Spanish-American War, fought on July 3, 1898, near Santiago de Cuba, Cuba, a battle that sealed the U.S. victory over the Spaniards.   On May 19, 1898, a month after the outbreak of hostilities between the two powers, a Spanish fleet under Admiral Pascual Cervera arrived in Santiago harbour on the...
Battle of Moscow
  Battle of Moscow, battle fought between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union from September 30, 1941 to January 7, 1942, during World War II. It was the climax of Nazi Germany’s Operation Barbarossa, and it ended the Germans’ intention to capture Moscow, which ultimately doomed the Third Reich.   The German advance on Moscow in September 1941 was soon in trouble...
Fall of Saigon
  Fall of Saigon, capture of Saigon, the capital of the Republic of South Vietnam, by North Vietnamese forces, which occurred from March 4 to April 30, 1975. It was the last major event of the Vietnam War and effectively signalled the bitterly contested unification of Vietnam.   The Paris Peace Accords of January 1973 had allowed the United States a face-saving...
Information Recommendation
Battle of the Crater
  Battle of the Crater, Union defeat on July 30, 1864, during the American Civil War (1861–65), part of the Siege of Petersburg, Virginia. In the final full year of the war, Union forces besieged the town of Petersburg, to the south of the Confederate capital of Richmond. But a well-conceived attempt to end the stalemate of trench warfare and break...
Battle of Smolensk
  Battle of Smolensk, engagement of the Napoleonic Wars fought in eastern Russia on August 16–18, 1812, and the first large-scale battle of the French campaign in Russia. When Napoleon invaded Russia in June 1812, he led a multinational army of more than half a million soldiers. He needed a rapid and decisive victory, but although victorious at Smolensk, some 230...
Battles of El-Alamein
  Battles of El-Alamein, linked battles in World War II, fought from July 1–27 and October 23—November 11, 1942, pitting German and Italian against British, Australian, New Zealander, South African, and Indian forces in coastal central Egypt and resulting in a pivotalAllied victory. After the First Battle of El-Alamein, Egypt (150 miles west of Cairo), ended in a stalemate, the second...
Dos de Mayo Uprising
  Dos de Mayo Uprising, also called the Battle of Madridan engagement of the Peninsular War that occurred on May 2, 1808. The French commanders in Spain were highly experienced and successful soldiers, but they completely misjudged the inflammatory nature of Spanish political, religious, and social life. What they considered as a simple punishment for dissent and opposition to French control...
Battle of Santo Domingo
  Battle of Santo Domingo, British naval victory over a French flotilla during the Napoleonic Wars, fought in the waters off the southern coast of what is now the Dominican Republic, in the Caribbean, on February 6. 1806. Although unwilling after the Battle of Trafalgar (1805) to face Britain in a full-scale fleet battle, the French navy was still able to...
Battle of Kasserine Pass
  Battle of Kasserine Pass, the first large-scale encounter in World War II between Italian and German land forces and the U.S. army, fought February 14–24, 1943. The Axis offensive along the Kasserine Pass, in a gap in the Atlas Mountains of west-central Tunisia, resulted in a humiliating setback for the Americans, but they recovered quickly and prevented the Axis forces...
Battle of Saint-Mihiel
  Battle of Saint-Mihiel, Allied victory and the first U.S.-led offensive in World War I, fought from September 12–16, 1918 . The Allied attack against the Saint-Mihiel salient provided the Americans with an opportunity to use the American Expeditionary Forces on the Western Front en masse and, for the first time, under their own command rather that under that of French...
Battle of Jumonville Glen
  Battle of Jumonville Glen, opening battle of the French and Indian War, fought on May 28, 1754, also noteworthy as the combat action for George Washington. Imperial ambitions brought England and France into conflict in the Ohio River Valley, forming a theater in the global Seven Years’ War, of which, it is believed, the Battle of Jumonville Glen was the...