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India: Drainage System and Rivers (NCERT Geography Digest)

Original CAPF digest of India's drainage: the Himalayan and Peninsular river systems, the major rivers and tributaries, lakes and the river-water disputes

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Book DigestGeographyNCERTIndia DrainageRiversHimalayan RiversPeninsular Rivers

India's rivers fall into two great groups, Himalayan (perennial, fed by snowmelt and rain) and Peninsular (mostly seasonal, fed by rain). Most drain into the Bay of Bengal; the Indus, Narmada, Tapi and the rivers of the western coast drain into the Arabian Sea.

Himalayan rivers (perennial)

These are older than the mountains in places (antecedent), cut deep gorges, and carry heavy silt to build large plains and deltas.

  • Indus system: rises near Lake Mansarovar (Tibet), flows through Ladakh, and mainly through Pakistan. Its five Punjab tributaries (left bank) are the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas and Sutlej. The Indus Waters Treaty (1960), brokered by the World Bank, allots the three western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab) largely to Pakistan and the three eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej) to India, a key India-Pakistan water-security agreement.
  • Ganga system: the Ganga rises as the Bhagirathi from the Gangotri glacier; the Bhagirathi and Alaknanda meet at Devprayag to form the Ganga. Left-bank Himalayan tributaries: Ghaghara, Gandak, Kosi ("the sorrow of Bihar" for its floods). Right-bank tributaries from the peninsula: the Yamuna (the longest tributary, itself joined by the Chambal, Betwa and Ken) and the Son. The Ganga-Brahmaputra forms the world's largest delta, the Sundarbans (mangroves), shared with Bangladesh.
  • Brahmaputra system: rises as the Tsangpo in Tibet, enters India in Arunachal Pradesh as the Dihang/Siang, flows through Assam (where it is braided and flood-prone) and enters Bangladesh as the Jamuna, joining the Ganga.

Peninsular rivers (mostly seasonal)

Older, with graded, shallow valleys; rain-fed and seasonal. Most flow east into the Bay of Bengal; two major ones flow west through rift valleys into the Arabian Sea.

River Source Mouth Notes
Mahanadi Chhattisgarh Bay of Bengal Hirakud dam.
Godavari Trimbak, Maharashtra Bay of Bengal The longest Peninsular river ("Dakshin Ganga"); tributaries include the Pranhita, Indravati, Manjira.
Krishna Mahabaleshwar Bay of Bengal Tributaries: Tungabhadra, Bhima, Koyna.
Kaveri (Cauvery) Brahmagiri (Karnataka) Bay of Bengal Subject of the long Karnataka-Tamil Nadu water dispute; the Sivasamudram falls.
Narmada Amarkantak Arabian Sea (Gulf of Khambhat) Flows west through a rift valley; the Sardar Sarovar project; Marble Rocks, Dhuandhar falls.
Tapi (Tapti) Satpura (Madhya Pradesh) Arabian Sea Flows west through a rift valley, parallel to the Narmada.

The Narmada and Tapi flow westward through rift valleys (between the Vindhyas and Satpuras), which is why, unlike most peninsular rivers, they do not form deltas but estuaries.

Lakes

  • Freshwater: Wular (Jammu and Kashmir, the largest freshwater lake, of tectonic origin), Dal, Bhimtal, Loktak (Manipur).
  • Salt/brackish: Sambhar (Rajasthan, a major salt source), Chilika (Odisha, the largest brackish-water lagoon), Pulicat (with Sriharikota), Vembanad (Kerala).

River-water sharing and disputes (the governance angle)

Inter-state river-water disputes are adjudicated under the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956 (tribunals): the Kaveri (Karnataka-Tamil Nadu-Kerala-Puducherry), the Krishna, the Ravi-Beas (Punjab-Haryana) and the Mahadayi are recurring examples. Article 262 of the Constitution empowers Parliament to provide for such adjudication. This is a strong polity-geography crossover for the essay and interview.

The security and human-rights angle

Rivers are at the heart of two security-sensitive issues: the Indus Waters Treaty (1960) with Pakistan, periodically strained, and the management of the Brahmaputra, whose upper course lies in China, raising trans-boundary data-sharing and dam-building concerns. River floods (Kosi, Brahmaputra) are perennial disaster-management challenges that draw in the CAPFs and the NDRF.

How CAPF asks this

  • Which rivers flow west (Narmada, Tapi) and why (rift valleys, estuaries not deltas). Longest peninsular river (Godavari).
  • The five rivers of Punjab and the Indus Waters Treaty split. Confluence at Devprayag (Bhagirathi and Alaknanda).
  • Match river to dam or dispute (Kaveri, Krishna, Hirakud on Mahanadi, Sardar Sarovar on Narmada).

Authored practice

  1. Which two major peninsular rivers flow westward into the Arabian Sea through rift valleys? (Answer: the Narmada and the Tapi.) Authored practice, not a verbatim PYQ.
  2. The Bhagirathi and the Alaknanda meet to form the Ganga at: (a) Rudraprayag (b) Devprayag (c) Karnaprayag (d) Haridwar. Answer: (b) Devprayag. Authored practice, not a verbatim PYQ.

Cross-references

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