Geography · Chapter 03

🌊 Drainage System

Rivers of India — Himalayan and Peninsular river systems.

🌊 India's River Systems

India's drainage system is divided into two major groups based on their origin and characteristics.

Himalayan Rivers (Perennial — flow all year):
Fed by glaciers AND monsoon rains. Carry large amount of silt. Create large fertile plains and deltas.
Indus system: Indus, Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas, Sutlej (5 rivers give Punjab its name: "land of 5 rivers")
Ganga system: Ganga, Yamuna, Ghaghra, Gandak, Kosi, Son, Chambal. Most important river system of India.
Brahmaputra system: Brahmaputra (Tsangpo in Tibet, Jamuna in Bangladesh). Carries the highest water volume of any Indian river. Creates world's largest river island — Majuli (Assam).

Peninsular Rivers (Seasonal — depend on monsoon):
Flow in valleys, shallower. Drain into either Arabian Sea or Bay of Bengal.
West-flowing: Narmada, Tapi (flow in rift valleys, no delta — form estuaries)
East-flowing: Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri (form large deltas in Bay of Bengal)

Longest river
Ganga
2,525 km in India
Largest basin
Ganga
8.6 lakh sq km
Biggest volume
Brahmaputra
highest discharge
Longest peninsular
Godavari
1,465 km — 'Vridha Ganga'
W-flowing peninsular
Narmada + Tapi
rift valleys, estuaries
Largest delta
Sundarbans
Ganga-Brahmaputra
Ganga River at Rishikesh — sacred and longest river of India
Ganga River at Rishikesh — sacred and longest river of IndiaWikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
Yamuna River at Agra — major Ganga tributary
Yamuna River at Agra — major Ganga tributaryWikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
💡 Why do Narmada & Tapi flow westward?

Most peninsular rivers flow east (toward Bay of Bengal) because the Western Ghats act as a watershed.
But Narmada and Tapi are exceptions — they flow westward into the Arabian Sea. Why?
• They flow through rift valleys (grabens) — formed by faulting/geological fractures
• The Vindhya and Satpura ranges are on either side of their valleys
• They do NOT form deltas — form estuaries (funnel-shaped mouths) instead
• Their valleys are some of India's most fertile agricultural land

🏞️ Lakes of India — key facts

Chilika Lake (Odisha) — largest coastal lagoon in India, largest wintering ground for migratory birds in Asia
Wular Lake (J&K) — largest freshwater lake in India
Vembanad Lake (Kerala) — longest lake in India (~96km), Nehru Trophy Boat Race
Loktak Lake (Manipur) — largest freshwater lake in NE India, floating phumdis (vegetation islands)
Dal Lake (Kashmir) — famous for houseboats and shikaras

🎬

Major Rivers of India

Animation
INDIA'S RIVERS — CLICK A RIVER TO EXPLORE Ganga Yamuna Brahmaputra Godavari Krishna Narmada Kaveri Himalayan (perennial) Peninsular (seasonal) West-flowing (to Arab.Sea) East-flowing (to Bay) CLICK A RIVER ON THE MAP India has both perennial Himalayan rivers (fed by glaciers) and seasonal peninsular rivers (fed by monsoon).

Himalayan rivers are perennial — they flow all year. Peninsular rivers dry up in summer.

🗺️

Compare River Systems

Interactive
SourceGlaciers + Himalayan rainfall
NaturePerennial (flow all year)
CourseYoung, steep, V-shaped valleys, waterfalls
Silt loadVery high — builds fertile plains
ExamplesGanga, Yamuna, Indus, Brahmaputra
Good for irrigation (perennial) and hydroelectric power (fast flow, deep gorges).
Practice (NCERT): Why are the east-flowing rivers of the peninsula able to form deltas but the west-flowing ones form estuaries?
East-flowing rivers (Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri):
• Flow through gentle slopes over long distances → carry heavy sediment load
• Flow slowly when they reach the coastal plain → deposit sediment → build deltas
• Bay of Bengal is calmer than Arabian Sea → waves don't wash away deposits

West-flowing rivers (Narmada, Tapi):
• Flow through rift valleys — narrow and fast
• Hard rocky valley floors — rivers carry less sediment
• Reach the Arabian Sea quickly through a narrow mouth
• Strong tidal action at the coast sweeps away any sediment
• Form estuaries instead — funnel-shaped, tidal influence reaches inland

So the difference is: slope gradient + sediment load + coastal conditions = delta vs estuary.
Practice (NCERT): What is the Sundarbans delta? Why is it important?
The Sundarbans is the world's largest mangrove delta, formed by the Ganga-Brahmaputra river system at its mouth in the Bay of Bengal. It spans India (West Bengal) and Bangladesh.

Area: ~10,000 sq km (India + Bangladesh combined)

Importance:
Biodiversity hotspot — home to the Royal Bengal Tiger, Irrawaddy dolphins, saltwater crocodiles, Olive Ridley sea turtles
UNESCO World Heritage Site (Indian side declared 1987)
Ramsar wetland (internationally protected wetland)
Carbon sink — mangroves store enormous amounts of CO₂
Coastal protection — mangroves absorb cyclone energy, protecting inland areas
Sundarban tigers are unique — they swim between islands and have been known to attack fishermen
• Name comes from "Sundari tree" (Heritiera fomes), a dominant mangrove species
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