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Windows Live® Search Results Humber (ancient Abus), estuary, eastern England, formed by the Trent and Ouse rivers. It flows generally east from the junction of the Trent and Ouse and then south-east into the North Sea, a distance of about 60 km (37 mi). At its head the estuary is about 1.6 km (1 mi) wide. Approximately 13 km (8 mi) above its mouth it widens to 13 km. A shallow bay, enclosed by a peninsula called Spurn Head, is on the northern side of the mouth. Although navigation on parts of the Humber is made difficult by shoals, the river is an important shipping route; the ports of Hull, Grimsby, and Goole are situated on its banks. In ancient times it was a means of entrance to England for migrating peoples. The suspension bridge that spans the Humber near Hull was until 1995 the longest in the world.
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