Paper IPaper I · Geography

Indian Drainage System and Rivers

Himalayan versus peninsular river systems, their origins, tributaries, courses and mouths, the major lakes and waterfalls, dams and basins, and the riverine border angle for CAPF

CAPF wiki21 min read26 sections
At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectGeographySyllabusIndian and World Geography: physical, social and economic aspects of geography pertaining to India and the WorldImportanceHigh
IndiaRiversDrainageGangaBrahmaputraIndusGodavariLakes

Flagship: what this is and why CAPF cares

A drainage system is the network of channels by which a region sheds its water, and the divide that separates one such basin from the next. India's rivers are tested by CAPF as a matching and location quiz: source to river, river to tributary, river to mouth, river to dam, lake to State, waterfall to river. The east-versus-west flow rule and the tributaries of the big three systems return year after year. The security value is just as real. The Indus system is locked into the Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan and is a standing diplomatic and security lever; the Brahmaputra rises in China, making upstream dams a strategic worry; and the riverine stretches of the Indo-Bangladesh border, the Sundarbans and the char (river-island) tracts, are among the Border Security Force's hardest sectors, patrolled by boat and floating border outposts. The anchor text is NCERT Class XI, India: Physical Environment (the chapter on drainage).

Core concept and process

Indian rivers fall into two great families with opposite personalities.

The Himalayan rivers (Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra) are perennial, fed by both monsoon rain and Himalayan snow and glacier melt, so they flow all year. Many are antecedent, meaning they predate the rise of the mountains and have cut deep gorges as the range lifted across their path (the Indus, Sutlej and Brahmaputra all gorge through the Himalayas). In their youthful mountain stage they erode vigorously; on the plains they slow, meander, throw off ox-bow lakes, and build vast deltas at their mouths.

The Peninsular rivers are older, flow in shallow, broad, mature valleys with little down-cutting, and are mostly seasonal because they depend on the monsoon rain alone. The eastward tilt of the plateau sends the majority (Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri) east to the Bay of Bengal, where they build deltas; the Narmada and Tapi are the great exceptions, flowing west through fault troughs to the Arabian Sea without deltas (they form estuaries instead).

Drainage patterns the exam names: dendritic (tree-like, on uniform rock, like the Ganga plains), trellis (rectangular, on folded or faulted rock), radial (streams running outward off a dome or peak, as on Amarkantak), and centripetal (streams converging into a central basin or lake).

Himalayan versus peninsular rivers, side by side:

Feature Himalayan rivers Peninsular rivers
Flow perennial (snow plus rain) mostly seasonal (rain-fed)
Age younger, youthful stage older, mature stage
Valley deep V-shaped gorges, then wide plains shallow, broad, graded
Course long, meandering, antecedent short to medium, fixed, fault-guided
Mouth large deltas deltas (east) or estuaries (Narmada, Tapi)
Examples Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri, Narmada, Tapi

Indian rivers are also grouped by where they drain: the Bay of Bengal system (about 77 percent of the drainage area, including the Ganga, Brahmaputra, Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri) and the Arabian Sea system (the Indus, Narmada, Tapi and the short, swift west-coast streams). A river basin is the area drained by a river and its tributaries; the Ganga basin is the largest in India.

A note on naming: rivers often change name along their course (the Ganga is the Bhagirathi above Devprayag and the Padma in Bangladesh; the Brahmaputra is the Tsangpo, then the Siang, then the Jamuna), which is the basis of many matching traps. Keep the source name, the Indian-stretch name and the mouth name distinct.

The Indus system

The Indus rises near Lake Mansarovar in Tibet, flows north-west through Ladakh, gorges past Nanga Parbat, and turns south through Pakistan to the Arabian Sea. Its five great left-bank tributaries give Punjab ("land of five waters") its name: the Jhelum (rises at Verinag, flows through the Kashmir Valley and Wular Lake), the Chenab (largest of the five, formed by the Chandra and Bhaga at Tandi), the Ravi, the Beas (entirely within India, joins the Sutlej at Harike), and the Sutlej (rises near Mansarovar as the Langchen, an antecedent river, dammed at Bhakra). Under the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960, brokered by the World Bank, the three eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej) are allocated to India and the three western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab) largely to Pakistan, with India retaining limited non-consumptive use of the western rivers.

The Ganga system

The Ganga is the longest river within India. It rises as the Bhagirathi from the Gangotri glacier (at Gaumukh); the Alaknanda joins it at Devprayag, and below that confluence the river is called the Ganga. It emerges onto the plains at Haridwar, runs through Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal, and splits in the delta: the Bhagirathi-Hooghly distributary turns south past Kolkata while the main flow continues east into Bangladesh as the Padma. Joined there by the Brahmaputra (as the Jamuna) and the Meghna, it forms the world's largest delta, the Sundarbans, on the Bay of Bengal. The Yamuna is its longest and most important tributary, rising at the Yamunotri glacier and joining the Ganga at Prayagraj (Allahabad), the Triveni Sangam.

Ganga course landmarks

From source to sea the Ganga passes a recognisable string of landmarks the exam draws on: Gangotri and Gaumukh (glacier source), Devprayag (named), Haridwar (onto the plains), Kanpur and Prayagraj (Yamuna confluence), Varanasi, Patna (joined by the Son, Gandak and Ghaghara), Farakka (the barrage where the Hooghly distributary splits off), and the Sundarbans mouth. The Ganga is the subject of the Namami Gange and earlier Ganga Action Plan clean-up programmes.

The Brahmaputra system

The Brahmaputra rises in Tibet as the Tsangpo, runs east for a great distance behind the Himalayas, then takes a hairpin bend (the Great Bend) around Namcha Barwa and plunges south into Arunachal Pradesh as the Siang or Dihang. In Assam, joined by the Dibang and Lohit, it becomes the Brahmaputra, a braided river so heavy with silt that it builds and shifts sandbar islands and is notorious for flooding; Majuli, in its course, is the world's largest river island. It is one of the few rivers with a masculine name ("son of Brahma"). It enters Bangladesh as the Jamuna and joins the Ganga.

The Brahmaputra's chief tributaries in India are the Subansiri, Kameng, Manas, Dhansiri and Dibang on the north bank and the Lohit on the east; the Tista joins it within Bangladesh. The Barak (Surma-Meghna) is the other major north-eastern river, draining the Manipur and Mizoram hills and joining the Ganga-Brahmaputra system in Bangladesh. The names of the river at its three stages, Tsangpo (Tibet), Siang or Dihang (Arunachal) and Brahmaputra (Assam), are a common matching trap.

Peninsular rivers

  • Mahanadi: rises in the Chhattisgarh highlands, dammed at Hirakud (one of the longest dams), flows east to the Bay of Bengal through Odisha.
  • Godavari: the largest peninsular river, the "Dakshina Ganga" (Ganga of the South), rises at Triambak near Nashik in Maharashtra and drains the widest peninsular basin, reaching the Bay of Bengal through a large delta in Andhra Pradesh.
  • Krishna: the second-longest peninsular river, rises at Mahabaleshwar in the Western Ghats, dammed at Nagarjuna Sagar and Srisailam, flows east through Karnataka, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.
  • Kaveri: rises at Talakaveri on the Brahmagiri hills in Karnataka, the most regulated peninsular river (it gets rain from both monsoons, so it flows more steadily), forms the Shivanasamudra falls, flows through the fertile Tamil Nadu delta to the Bay of Bengal; subject of the long Karnataka-Tamil Nadu water dispute.
  • Narmada: rises at Amarkantak (Maikal hills) in Madhya Pradesh, flows west through the rift between the Vindhya and Satpura ranges, makes the Dhuandhar falls at Jabalpur, is dammed at Sardar Sarovar, and reaches the Gulf of Khambhat as an estuary.
  • Tapi (Tapti): rises at Multai (Betul) in Madhya Pradesh, flows west parallel to and south of the Narmada through another rift trough to the Gulf of Khambhat.

West-coast and minor rivers

Besides the Narmada and Tapi, the western seaboard has many short, swift, non-perennial streams that tumble off the Western Ghats: the Mandovi and Zuari (Goa), the Sharavati (which makes the Jog falls), the Periyar and Bharathapuzha (Kerala), and the Sabarmati and Mahi (Gujarat, flowing to the Gulf of Khambhat). The Vaigai (Madurai) and the Penna are smaller east-flowing peninsular rivers. The Subarnarekha and Brahmani drain the eastern Chota Nagpur region to the Bay of Bengal. None build large deltas because they are short and the Ghats edge is close to the sea.

Lakes

Lakes are natural (tectonic, glacial, ox-bow, lagoon, volcanic-crater) or man-made reservoirs. Wular (Jammu and Kashmir) is India's largest freshwater lake, a tectonic basin on the Jhelum. Dal (Srinagar) is a famous valley lake. Chilika (Odisha) is the largest coastal lagoon, brackish, on the east coast. Sambhar (Rajasthan) is the largest inland saltwater lake. Vembanad (Kerala) is the longest lake, a backwater. Loktak (Manipur) is famous for its floating phumdis (mats of vegetation) and hosts the only floating national park, Keibul Lamjao, the last refuge of the sangai deer. Lonar (Maharashtra) is a meteorite-impact crater lake in the Deccan basalt. Pulicat straddles Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.

River lengths and basins (orientation)

Claim River
Longest river within India Ganga
Longest river of the Indian subcontinent (overall) Indus
Largest peninsular river (length and basin) Godavari
Second-longest peninsular river Krishna
Largest river basin in India Ganga basin
Largest west-flowing peninsular river Narmada
Only major river of the Thar Luni
Longest tributary of the Ganga Yamuna

Static facts to memorise (rivers)

River Source Mouth / drains into Note
Indus Near Lake Mansarovar, Tibet Arabian Sea (via Pakistan) Indus Waters Treaty, 1960
Ganga Gangotri glacier (as Bhagirathi) Bay of Bengal (Sundarbans delta) Longest river within India
Yamuna Yamunotri glacier Joins the Ganga at Prayagraj Longest tributary of the Ganga
Brahmaputra Tibet (as the Tsangpo) Bay of Bengal Braided; Majuli, world's largest river island
Mahanadi Chhattisgarh highlands Bay of Bengal Hirakud dam
Godavari Triambak (Nashik), Maharashtra Bay of Bengal Largest peninsular river; "Dakshina Ganga"
Krishna Mahabaleshwar Bay of Bengal Nagarjuna Sagar, Srisailam dams
Kaveri Talakaveri (Brahmagiri), Karnataka Bay of Bengal "Ganga of the South"; Karnataka-TN dispute
Narmada Amarkantak, Madhya Pradesh Arabian Sea (Gulf of Khambhat) West-flowing rift valley; Sardar Sarovar
Tapi (Tapti) Multai, Madhya Pradesh Arabian Sea (Gulf of Khambhat) West-flowing rift valley
Luni Aravallis (near Ajmer) Rann of Kutch Only river of the Thar; saline downstream

Tributaries reference table (high-yield matching)

Master river Key tributaries
Indus Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas, Sutlej (the five rivers of Punjab)
Ganga (left bank) Ramganga, Gomti, Ghaghara, Gandak, Kosi (the "sorrow of Bihar")
Ganga (right bank) Yamuna (longest tributary), Son; the Chambal, Betwa and Ken join the Yamuna
Brahmaputra Subansiri, Manas, Dibang, Lohit (and the Tista in Bengal)
Godavari Pranhita, Indravati, Manjira, Wainganga
Krishna Tungabhadra, Bhima, Koyna, Musi
Kaveri Hemavati, Kabini, Bhavani, Amravati
Narmada mostly short tributaries; Tawa is the largest

Lakes by type (orientation)

Type Examples
Tectonic / structural Wular (J&K)
Glacial Dal, and many Himalayan tarns
Lagoon (coastal) Chilika (Odisha), Pulicat (AP-TN), Vembanad (Kerala)
Salt (inland) Sambhar (Rajasthan), Pangong Tso, Tso Moriri (Ladakh)
Volcanic crater Lonar (Maharashtra)
Ox-bow along the meandering Ganga and Brahmaputra
Man-made reservoir Gobind Sagar (Bhakra), Hirakud reservoir, Indira Sagar

Lakes and waterfalls (matching)

Lake State Type / claim to fame
Wular Jammu and Kashmir Largest freshwater lake (tectonic, on the Jhelum)
Dal Jammu and Kashmir Valley lake, Srinagar
Chilika Odisha Largest coastal (brackish) lagoon
Sambhar Rajasthan Largest inland salt lake
Vembanad Kerala Longest lake (backwater)
Loktak Manipur Floating phumdis; Keibul Lamjao floating park
Lonar Maharashtra Meteorite-crater lake in Deccan basalt
Pulicat Andhra Pradesh / Tamil Nadu Lagoon
Waterfall River State
Kunchikal (highest in India) Varahi Karnataka
Jog / Gersoppa Sharavati Karnataka
Dudhsagar Mandovi Goa-Karnataka
Chitrakote ("mini Niagara") Indravati Chhattisgarh
Shivanasamudra Kaveri Karnataka
Dhuandhar Narmada Madhya Pradesh (Jabalpur)
Athirappilly Chalakudy Kerala

Major dams and multipurpose projects (matching)

Dam / project River State Note
Bhakra Nangal Sutlej Punjab / Himachal one of the highest gravity dams; Gobind Sagar reservoir
Hirakud Mahanadi Odisha among the longest dams in the world
Nagarjuna Sagar Krishna Telangana / Andhra Pradesh large masonry dam
Srisailam Krishna Andhra Pradesh / Telangana hydroelectric
Sardar Sarovar Narmada Gujarat Narmada Valley project; the Narmada Bachao movement
Tehri Bhagirathi Uttarakhand India's tallest dam
Mettur Kaveri Tamil Nadu Stanley reservoir
Tungabhadra Tungabhadra Karnataka inter-State, with Andhra Pradesh
Indira Sagar Narmada Madhya Pradesh largest reservoir by capacity
Rihand Son tributary Uttar Pradesh Govind Ballabh Pant Sagar

The Damodar Valley Corporation (on the Damodar, modelled on the Tennessee Valley Authority) was India's first multipurpose river-valley project; the Bhakra Nangal followed as the showpiece of the Sutlej. These projects deliver irrigation, power, flood control and drinking water, the basis of the link to indian agriculture and cropping and indian industries transport and population.

Cities on rivers (matching)

City River
Delhi, Agra, Mathura Yamuna
Varanasi, Kanpur, Patna, Haridwar, Prayagraj Ganga (Prayagraj at the Yamuna confluence)
Ayodhya Saryu (Ghaghara)
Srinagar Jhelum
Ahmedabad Sabarmati
Surat Tapi
Vadodara Vishwamitri
Nashik Godavari
Vijayawada Krishna
Hyderabad Musi
Kolkata Hooghly
Cuttack Mahanadi
Jabalpur Narmada
Ludhiana Sutlej
Guwahati Brahmaputra
Kota Chambal
Tiruchirappalli Kaveri

Security and strategic angle

Rivers are border infrastructure and bargaining chips. The Indus system is governed by the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960, and water-sharing with Pakistan is a recurring flashpoint and a lever India can adjust within the treaty. The Brahmaputra rises in China as the Tsangpo, so any upstream dam, diversion or sudden release is a strategic concern for the lower riparian States of the north-east, and India watches Chinese hydro projects near the Great Bend closely. River borders are physically demanding to police: the Sundarbans delta and the char (shifting river-island) tracts of the Indo-Bangladesh boundary are guarded by the Border Security Force using boats and floating border outposts, because the channel shifts and the islands appear and vanish with the flood, complicating where the line even sits. The Sutlej and other riverine stretches with Pakistan, and the man-eating tiger and tidal cover of the Sundarbans, make these among the hardest frontiers in the world to hold. See india borders neighbours and strategic geography and indian monsoon and climate.

Inter-State and international water disputes (orientation)

Water sharing is a recurring federal and diplomatic theme that CAPF touches in current affairs and the security angle.

Dispute Rivers Parties
Kaveri Kaveri Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Puducherry
Krishna Krishna Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh
Ravi-Beas (SYL canal) Ravi, Beas, Sutlej Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan
Narmada Narmada Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan
Mahadayi (Mhadei) Mandovi Goa, Karnataka, Maharashtra
Indus Waters Treaty Indus system India, Pakistan (World Bank brokered, 1960)
Teesta Tista India, Bangladesh (unresolved sharing)

Disputes are referred to tribunals under the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, while international rivers are governed by treaty.

How CAPF asks it

  • Matching feature to location: river to its source, to its tributaries, or to the dam on it.
  • Single-correct location: place a river or confluence (Devprayag, Prayagraj, the Sundarbans) on a map.
  • Statement-based: judge claims such as "The Narmada and Tapi flow west through rift valleys" (correct) and "The Godavari drains into the Arabian Sea" (incorrect, the Bay of Bengal).
  • One-liner: largest peninsular river (Godavari), largest freshwater lake (Wular), highest waterfall (Kunchikal).
  • Pairing: dam to river; tributary to master river.

Authored practice:

  1. Which one of the following rivers flows west into the Arabian Sea through a rift valley? (a) Mahanadi (b) Godavari (c) Tapi (d) Kaveri. Answer (c). The Tapi and the Narmada are the major west-flowing peninsular rivers in fault troughs.
  2. The Bhagirathi and the Alaknanda join to form the Ganga at (a) Haridwar (b) Devprayag (c) Rudraprayag (d) Prayagraj. Answer (b). Below Devprayag the river is called the Ganga; it reaches the plains at Haridwar.
  3. Match the river with its source. The Kaveri rises at (a) Amarkantak (b) Mahabaleshwar (c) Talakaveri (d) Triambak. Answer (c). Amarkantak is the Narmada, Mahabaleshwar the Krishna, Triambak the Godavari.
  4. Consider: (1) The Brahmaputra is known as the Tsangpo in Tibet. (2) Majuli is the largest river island in the world. Which is or are correct? Answer: both. Majuli lies in the Brahmaputra in Assam.
  5. The largest inland saltwater lake in India is (a) Wular (b) Sambhar (c) Chilika (d) Vembanad. Answer (b). Wular is the largest freshwater lake, Chilika the largest coastal lagoon, Vembanad the longest.
  6. The city of Prayagraj (Allahabad) lies at the confluence of the Ganga with the (a) Son (b) Yamuna (c) Gomti (d) Ghaghara. Answer (b). The Triveni Sangam is the meeting of the Ganga and the Yamuna.
  7. India's tallest dam is built on the (a) Sutlej (b) Mahanadi (c) Bhagirathi (d) Krishna. Answer (c). The Tehri dam is on the Bhagirathi in Uttarakhand; Bhakra is on the Sutlej, Hirakud on the Mahanadi.
  8. Which river forms the Sundarbans delta jointly with the Ganga? (a) Mahanadi (b) Brahmaputra (c) Godavari (d) Krishna. Answer (b). The Ganga and the Brahmaputra (with the Meghna) build the world's largest delta.
  9. The Kosi, infamous as the "sorrow of Bihar", is a tributary of the (a) Yamuna (b) Brahmaputra (c) Ganga (d) Son. Answer (c). The Kosi is a left-bank Ganga tributary that shifts course and floods.

Common confusion

  • Godavari (largest peninsular river, to the Bay of Bengal) versus Narmada (largest west-flowing, to the Arabian Sea).
  • Wular (largest freshwater) versus Sambhar (largest inland salt) versus Chilika (largest coastal lagoon) versus Vembanad (longest).
  • Chambal and Betwa join the Yamuna, not the Ganga directly; the Yamuna then joins the Ganga at Prayagraj.
  • The Tsangpo (Brahmaputra in Tibet) versus the Sutlej (also rises near Mansarovar); both gorge through the Himalayas.
  • Kunchikal (highest waterfall, on the Varahi) versus Jog (on the Sharavati, the famous segmented fall).
  • Krishna rises at Mahabaleshwar; the Kaveri at Talakaveri; do not swap them.
  • Godavari source is Triambak (Nashik); Krishna source is Mahabaleshwar; both flow east; only the Narmada and Tapi go west.
  • The Sutlej and the Indus both rise near Lake Mansarovar; the Sutlej is dammed at Bhakra, the Indus is governed by the treaty.
  • Jhelum (Wular Lake, Srinagar) versus Chenab (largest of the five, formed at Tandi); both are western Indus rivers under Pakistan's share.

Memory hook

  • Five rivers of Punjab, west to east: "Jolly Chaps Ride Bikes Slowly" for Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas, Sutlej.
  • Ganga left-bank tributaries upstream-down: "Really Good Girls Get Kissed" for Ramganga, Gomti, Ghaghara, Gandak, Kosi.
  • West-flowing peninsular pair: "NT" for Narmada and Tapi (the only big ones going to the Arabian Sea).
  • Indus Waters Treaty: India keeps the eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej), Pakistan the western (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab).
  • Panch Prayag end at Devprayag: "Vishnu, Nand, Karna, Rudra, Dev" for the order down the Alaknanda.
  • "Godavari is the biggest peninsular, the Dakshina Ganga" fixes the largest east-flowing river.
  • Dams to rivers: "Bhakra-Sutlej, Hirakud-Mahanadi, Sardar Sarovar-Narmada, Tehri-Bhagirathi, Nagarjuna Sagar-Krishna."

The five Prayags of the Ganga headwaters

The Alaknanda gathers its head-tributaries at five sacred confluences (the Panch Prayag), a favourite ordering question:

  • Vishnuprayag: Alaknanda meets the Dhauliganga.
  • Nandprayag: Alaknanda meets the Nandakini.
  • Karnaprayag: Alaknanda meets the Pindar.
  • Rudraprayag: Alaknanda meets the Mandakini.
  • Devprayag: Alaknanda meets the Bhagirathi, below which the river is called the Ganga.

Night before

  • Himalayan rivers perennial (snow plus rain); peninsular rivers mostly seasonal.
  • Indus near Mansarovar; Indus Waters Treaty 1960; east rivers to India, west rivers to Pakistan.
  • Ganga starts at Devprayag (Bhagirathi plus Alaknanda); plains at Haridwar; Yamuna joins at Prayagraj.
  • Godavari largest peninsular ("Dakshina Ganga"); Narmada and Tapi flow west to the Gulf of Khambhat.
  • Wular largest freshwater, Chilika largest lagoon, Sambhar largest inland salt, Vembanad longest, Loktak phumdis.
  • Kunchikal highest waterfall, Jog on the Sharavati; Bhakra on the Sutlej, Hirakud on the Mahanadi.
  • Panch Prayag end at Devprayag, where the Ganga is named; the headwater confluences are an ordering favourite.
  • Damodar Valley Corporation was the first multipurpose project; Tehri (Bhagirathi) is the tallest dam.

One-line recall

  • Himalayan rivers are perennial (snow plus rain); peninsular rivers are mostly rain-fed and seasonal.
  • The Indus rises near Mansarovar; the Indus Waters Treaty (1960) gives India the eastern rivers and Pakistan the western.
  • The five rivers of Punjab are Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas and Sutlej.
  • The Ganga begins at Devprayag and enters the plains at Haridwar; the Yamuna is its longest tributary.
  • Chambal and Betwa join the Yamuna; Kosi is the "sorrow of Bihar".
  • The Brahmaputra is the Tsangpo in Tibet; Majuli is the world's largest river island.
  • The Ganga and Brahmaputra form the Sundarbans, the world's largest delta.
  • The Godavari is the largest peninsular river; the Kaveri is the "Ganga of the South".
  • The Narmada and Tapi flow west through rift valleys to the Gulf of Khambhat.
  • Wular (largest freshwater), Chilika (largest lagoon), Sambhar (largest inland salt), Vembanad (longest), Loktak (phumdis), Lonar (crater).
  • Kunchikal is the highest waterfall; Jog is on the Sharavati; Dhuandhar on the Narmada.
  • Bhakra on the Sutlej, Hirakud on the Mahanadi, Nagarjuna Sagar on the Krishna, Sardar Sarovar on the Narmada.
  • The Brahmaputra rises in China, so upstream dams are a strategic concern in the north-east.
  • The Sundarbans and char tracts of the Bangladesh border are guarded by the BSF with boats and floating outposts.
  • The Bay of Bengal system drains about three-quarters of India; the Ganga basin is the largest.
  • The Damodar Valley Corporation was India's first multipurpose project; Bhakra Nangal was the showpiece of the Sutlej.
  • River cities: Delhi and Agra on the Yamuna, Varanasi on the Ganga, Srinagar on the Jhelum, Surat on the Tapi, Hyderabad on the Musi.
  • Tehri (on the Bhagirathi) is India's tallest dam; Hirakud is among the longest; Indira Sagar holds the largest reservoir.
  • Drainage patterns: dendritic (uniform rock), trellis (folded rock), radial (a dome), centripetal (a basin).
  • The Indus is the longest river of the subcontinent overall; the Ganga is the longest within India.
  • West-coast streams (Sharavati, Periyar, Mandovi) are short and swift and build no large deltas.
  • Water disputes: Kaveri (Karnataka-Tamil Nadu), Krishna, Ravi-Beas (SYL canal), Mahadayi; Teesta with Bangladesh.
  • The Yamunotri glacier feeds the Yamuna; the Gangotri feeds the Bhagirathi-Ganga.
  • The Panch Prayag of the Alaknanda end at Devprayag, where the Ganga takes its name.
  • River-water disputes are referred to tribunals under the Inter-State River Water Disputes Act.
  • Ganga course: Gaumukh, Devprayag, Haridwar, Prayagraj, Varanasi, Patna, Farakka, Sundarbans.
  • Farakka barrage diverts water into the Hooghly to flush the Kolkata port; it is also a Ganga-water issue with Bangladesh.
  • Namami Gange is the current Ganga clean-up programme.
  • Brahmaputra stages: Tsangpo (Tibet), Siang or Dihang (Arunachal), Brahmaputra (Assam), Jamuna (Bangladesh).
  • The Barak (Surma-Meghna) drains the Manipur and Mizoram hills, the other major north-eastern river.
  • Tributaries trap: Subansiri, Kameng, Manas and Dibang join the Brahmaputra; the Tista joins it in Bangladesh.
  • Lake types: Wular (tectonic), Chilika (lagoon), Sambhar (salt), Lonar (crater), Gobind Sagar (reservoir).
  • West-coast streams and minor rivers: Mandovi, Sharavati, Periyar, Sabarmati, Mahi, Subarnarekha, Vaigai.
  • The Chenab is the largest of the five Punjab rivers; the Beas lies entirely within India.
  • Farakka barrage and the Teesta sharing are the Ganga and Brahmaputra-system water issues with Bangladesh.

Glossary

  • Drainage basin: the whole area drained by a river and its tributaries.
  • Watershed (water divide): the high ground separating two basins.
  • Perennial river: a river that flows all year, like the Himalayan rivers fed by snowmelt.
  • Antecedent river: a river older than the mountains it crosses, having cut its gorge as the land rose.
  • Tributary: a stream that flows into a larger river; a distributary is a channel that branches off near the mouth.
  • Confluence: the meeting point of two rivers (Devprayag, Prayagraj).
  • Delta: a fan of sediment built where a river meets the sea (the Sundarbans).
  • Estuary: a funnel-shaped tidal mouth without a delta (the Narmada and Tapi mouths).
  • Ox-bow lake: a curved lake left when a meander is cut off.
  • Lagoon: a shallow coastal water body separated from the sea by a bar (Chilika, Pulicat).
  • Phumdi: a floating mat of vegetation, characteristic of Loktak Lake.
  • Char: a shifting river-island of silt, important on the Indo-Bangladesh riverine border.
  • Riparian State: a State or country through which, or along which, a river flows; "lower riparian" is downstream.
  • Doab: the land between two rivers, as in the Punjab and the Ganga-Yamuna doab.
  • Braided river: a river splitting into many shifting channels around sandbars, like the Brahmaputra.
  • Meander: a looping bend in a mature river across its floodplain.
  • Sangam / Prayag: a sacred river confluence, the most famous at Prayagraj (Ganga and Yamuna).
  • Multipurpose project: a dam serving irrigation, power, flood control and water supply together.
  • Drainage divide (watershed): the high ground separating two river basins.
  • Trellis pattern: a drainage pattern of right-angle joins, formed on folded or faulted rock.
  • Panch Prayag: the five sacred head-confluences of the Alaknanda, ending at Devprayag.
  • Indus Waters Treaty: the 1960 World-Bank-brokered pact dividing the Indus rivers between India and Pakistan.
  • Antecedent gorge: a deep valley cut by a river older than the mountain it crosses (the Indus and Sutlej gorges).
  • Endorheic basin: an inland drainage with no outlet to the sea (Sambhar, the Rann).
  • Barrage: a low diversion dam to raise water level and direct flow (Farakka on the Ganga).
  • Namami Gange / Ganga Action Plan: the river clean-up and conservation programmes for the Ganga.
  • Phumdi: a floating mat of soil and vegetation, the signature feature of Loktak Lake in Manipur.
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