Cross River, river in western Africa (mostly in southeastern Nigeria) that rises in several branches in the highlands of western Cameroon. Thence it flows in a westerly direction and enters Nigeria. Turning in a southwesterly direction after its confluence with the Aya River in Nigeria, it flows south (after receiving the Western Aboine River from the Udi Hills) through dense tropical rain forest, oil-palm bush, and mangrove swamps. It completes its 304-mile (489-kilometer) course to the Bight of Biafra through its estuary, which it shares with the Calabar River. Because the estuary is not blocked by a sandbar and has only a moderate tidal range (9 feet [3 meters] at Calabar), the Cross River serves as an important waterway. Palm oil and kernels, timber, cocoa, and rubber are sent by boat on the Cross River to the port of Calabar (on the Calabar River, 5 miles [8 kilometers] upstream from its entrance into the estuary) for export.
Portuguese navigators explored the lower section of the river in the 15th century, and the British official John Beecroft ventured upstream in the early 1840s.