Dams in India
Dams in India
Dams in India
• Tehri Dam(Uttarakhand)
• River: Mahanadi
Tehri Dam
• The Bhakra Nangal Dam is located in the state of Himachal Pradesh and Punjab. It is the
largest dam in India having a height of 225 metres
• Hirakud Dam
• The Hirakud Dam is located in the state of Orissa. It is the longest dam in India with a
length of 26 kms
• The Sardar Sarovar Dam is located in the state of Gujarat. It is the largest dam in the
Narmada Valley Project.
• This Dam is to benefit the other neighbouring states of Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and
Maharashtra.
• Himalayan Drainage
• Antecedent drainage i.e. Himalayan rivers are older than lesser Himalayas and Shiwaliks
• Himalayan rivers are older than the structures they cut across
• Generate large quantities of sediment & cause annual flooding & form Deltas
• Peninsular Drainage
• Super-imposed drainage i.e. regional structures are older than the river valleys that cut
through them.
• Geologically old
• Streams run in all directions without definite preference to any one particular region
• flows through China(Tibet region), India and Pakistan. In Tibet, it is known as Singi
Khambai or Lion's mouth.
left-bank tributaries –
The Zaskar river, Suru river, Soan river, Jhelum river, Chenab river, Ravi river, Beas river, Satluj
river, Panjnad
right-bank tributaries
The Shyok river, Gilgit river, Hunza river, Swat river, Kunnar river, Kurram river and Kabul river
are its major.
Source of origin
originates from a glacier near Bokhar Chu in the Tibetan region in the Kailash Mansarovar
range near the Mansarovar Lake.
Confluence or Mouth
drains into the Arabian Sea near the port city of Karachi, Pakistan after forming a huge delta.
The Jhelum
rises from the Sheshnag Lake near Verinag at the foot of Pir Panjal range.
The river flows through Srinagar and the beautiful Wular Lake.
The Chenab
made up of two streams, the Chandra and the Bhaga, which merge at Tandi, near Keylong in
the state of Himachal Pradesh.
The Ravi
originates near the Rohtang Pass in Kullu hills in the state of Himachal Pradesh.
drains away the area lying between southeastern part of Pir Panjal and the Dhauladhar ranges.
It merges into Chenab river near Sarai Sandhu in the Punjab region of Pakistan.
The Beas
rises from Beas Kund near the Rohtang Pass in the state of Himachal Pradesh.
The Satluj
rises from the Rakas Lake near the Mansarovar Lake in the Tibet region.
The Satluj river flows parallel to the Indus river before entering India at Shipki La. It is an
antecedent river. The Bhakra Nangal Project is constructed on the Satluj river.
• Ganga Tributaries
• Yamuna Tributaries
• The Ganga river system outspreads in India, Tibet (China), Nepal and Bangladesh.
• It covers states of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bihar, West Bengal,
Uttarakhand, Jharkhand, Haryana, Chhattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh and Union Territory
of Delhi.
Brahmaputra river system is one of the largest rivers of the world. In Tibet region, it is known
by the name of Yarlung Tsangpo. It enters by the names of Siang and Dihang in India. And after
it is joined by its two main tributaries, the Dibang and the Lohit, it is known by the name of
Brahmaputra. It flows in Bangladesh by the name of Jumna. Finally, it merges with the Ganga
river.
Source of origin: The Brahmaputra river rises from Chemayundung glacier of the Kailash range
near the Mansarovar Lake to the north of the Himalayas in the southwest Tibet region.
Kaveri is the third largest river after Godavari and Krishna in south India and the largest in
Tamil Nadu which on its course, bisects the state into North and South. The Kaveri river has
water flow throughout the year because it gets rainwater from south-west monsoons in the
upper-catchment area (located in Karnataka) and from the north-east monsoons in the lower-
catchment area (located in Tamil Nadu).
Kerala, Kar
Source of origin of the Kaveri river: The Kaveri river rises from Talakaveri in the hills of
Brahmagiri in Coorg district in the state of Karnataka.
Krishnarajsagar Dam
Source of origin of the Krishna river: It rises from a water spring near Mahabaleshwar located
in the Sahyadri hills region of the Western Ghats in the state of Maharashtra.
The Krishna basin is surrounded by the Godavari basin on the north and the Eastern Ghats on
the south and east and the Western Ghats on the west. The Krishna basin is roughly triangular
in shape.
Godavari
The Godavari river is the largest river of Peninsular India. It is known as the Dakshin Ganga or
Vridha Ganga (old Ganga) because of its age, size and length. It is navigable in the delta region.
Source of origin of the Godavari river: It rises from a place called Trimbak located in the
Western Ghats in Nashik district in the state of Maharashtra.
Western Flowing Eastern Flowing
Luni Damodar
Banas Subaranlekha
Amardagi Bhramani
Dhander Mahanadi
Shetrunji Vamsadhara
Mahi Krishna
Narmada Cavery
Vaitana Palar
Kalinadi Vallar
TadriGangavalli Vaigai
Shravati Gunar