Answer:
The rivers that flow into the Gulf of Mexico from Georgia are the Chattahoochee, the Apalachicola, the Flint, and the Ochlockonee rivers.
Step-by-step explanation:
-The Chattahoochee River is a long river in the southeastern United States that flows first in a southwest direction through the north of the state of Georgia, and then southward forming the border between this state and those of Alabama and Florida, until it converges with the Flint River forming the Apalachicola that will drain into the Gulf of Mexico.
-The Flint River is a river in the southeastern United States that runs through the state of Georgia, generally southbound, from the Upper Piedmont region, south of the Atlanta city, up to the wetlands of the coastal plain, in the southwest of the state. It has a length of about 560 km and drains 22,464 km² in western Georgia. Together with the Apalachicola River and Chattahoochee, it is part of the ACF basin. In its upper course through the red hills of Piedmont it is considered a particularly picturesque river, which flows without obstacles more than 320 km.
-The Apalachicola River, approximately 180 km long, is a prominent river in the southeastern United States that runs entirely through the state of Florida (although in a short stretch it forms the natural border between Florida and Georgia). It is formed by the confluence of the Chattahoochee (702 km) and Flint (560 km) rivers and flows into the Gulf of Mexico.
-The Ochlockonee River is a fairly fast river that is born south of the city of Sylvester in Worth County in southwest Georgia, United States and flowing into the Appalachian Bay in Florida.