This MCQ module is based on: Peninsular Rivers, Regimes & River-Linking
Peninsular Rivers, Regimes & River-Linking
This assessment will be based on: Peninsular Rivers, Regimes & River-Linking
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Chapter 3 · Peninsular Rivers, River Regimes & the Linking of Rivers
If the Himalayan rivers tell the story of India's youngest mountains, the Peninsular rivers tell the story of India's oldest land. Most of them flow east to the Bay of Bengal, building wide deltas; two — the Narmada and the Tapi — slip westward along ancient rifts and reach the Arabian Sea without forming deltas at all. This part profiles the Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri; explains the contrast between Himalayan and Peninsular regimes; and discusses the ambitious idea of linking surplus and deficit basins.
3.8 The Peninsular Drainage — Older, Graded, Mature
The Peninsular drainage system is older than the Himalayan one. The proof is written into the landscape itself: broad, largely graded? shallow valleys, and rivers that have reached an obvious maturity in their long profiles. Where Himalayan rivers still race through V-shaped gorges, Peninsular rivers meander through gentle, slope-stabilised channels — exactly what hundreds of millions of years of erosion are expected to produce.
3.8.1 Three Geological Events that Shaped Peninsular Drainage
The present orientation of Peninsular rivers is the cumulative result of three major events in the deep geological past:
3.9 The East-Flowing Peninsular Rivers
Four large rivers — the Mahanadi, the Godavari, the Krishna and the Kaveri — drain the Peninsular plateau eastward. Each carves through the central plateaus, cuts through the Eastern Ghats and finally builds a fertile delta as it enters the Bay of Bengal. (Note: the Chambal, Sind, Betwa, Ken and Son — also Peninsular in origin — are tributaries of the Ganga rather than independent east-flowing rivers, and were studied in Part 1.)
3.9.1 The Mahanadi
The Mahanadi rises near Sihawa in the Raipur district of Chhattisgarh and flows through Odisha to discharge into the Bay of Bengal. It is 851 km long, with a catchment of about 1.42 lakh sq km. About 53 per cent of the basin lies in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, the remaining 47 per cent in Odisha. Some navigation is carried on in its lower course, where the river forms a wide deltaic plain.
3.9.2 The Godavari — 'Dakshin Ganga'
The Godavari is the largest Peninsular river system, fittingly nicknamed the Dakshin Ganga ("Ganga of the South"). It rises in the Nasik district of Maharashtra and discharges into the Bay of Bengal. It is 1,465 km long, with a catchment of about 3.13 lakh sq km spread across Maharashtra (49%), Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh (20%) and Andhra Pradesh (the rest).
3.9.3 The Krishna
The Krishna is the second-largest east-flowing Peninsular river. It rises near Mahabaleshwar in the Sahyadri. Its total length is 1,401 km. Major tributaries — the Koyna, Tungbhadra and Bhima. Of the total catchment, about 27% lies in Maharashtra, 44% in Karnataka and 29% in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. The river finally builds a delta in coastal Andhra Pradesh.
3.9.4 The Kaveri — A Year-Round Peninsular River
The Kaveri rises in the Brahmagiri hills (1,341 m) of Kogadu (Coorg) district in Karnataka. Length: 800 km. Catchment: 81,155 sq km, distributed as about 3% in Kerala, 41% in Karnataka and 56% in Tamil Nadu. Its important tributaries are the Kabini, Bhavani and Amravati.
3.10 The West-Flowing Exceptions — Narmada, Tapi and Luni
3.10.1 The Narmada
The Narmada originates on the western flank of the Amarkantak plateau at a height of about 1,057 m. It then flows in a rift valley? between the Satpura in the south and the Vindhyan range in the north. Near Jabalpur it forms a picturesque gorge in marble rocks and the famous Dhuandhar waterfall. After flowing about 1,312 km, the river meets the Arabian Sea south of Bharuch, forming a broad 27 km long estuary rather than a delta. Catchment area: about 98,796 sq km. The Sardar Sarovar Project has been built on this river.
3.10.2 The Tapi
The Tapi is the other important westward-flowing river. It originates from Multai in the Betul district of Madhya Pradesh. Length: 724 km. Catchment area: 65,145 sq km, distributed as 79% Maharashtra, 15% MP and 6% Gujarat. Like the Narmada, it flows through a rift valley parallel to the Satpura range and reaches the Arabian Sea.
3.10.3 The Luni — Ephemeral River of the Desert
Beyond the Aravalis, in the dry west of Rajasthan, the Luni is the largest river system. It rises near Pushkar from two streams, the Saraswati and the Sabarmati, which join at Govindgarh. From there the combined river — now called the Luni — emerges from the Aravalis, flows west until Telwara, then turns south-west and finally ends in the Rann of Kuchchh. The entire system is ephemeral? — it carries water only during the rainy season.
India — Major Peninsular Rivers Schematic
Bloom: L3 ApplyFigure 3.3: Schematic showing the four major east-flowing rivers (Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri) and the two big west-flowing exceptions (Narmada, Tapi). The Western Ghats serve as the principal watershed of the Peninsula.
| River | Source | Length | Catchment / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mahanadi | Sihawa, Raipur dist., Chhattisgarh | 851 km | 1.42 lakh sq km; 53% MP & CG, 47% Odisha |
| Godavari | Nasik dist., Maharashtra | 1,465 km | 3.13 lakh sq km; tributaries Penganga, Indravati, Pranhita, Manjra; large delta below Rajamundri |
| Krishna | Mahabaleshwar, Sahyadri | 1,401 km | 27% Maharashtra, 44% Karnataka, 29% AP & Telangana; tributaries Koyna, Tungbhadra, Bhima |
| Kaveri | Brahmagiri hills (1,341 m), Karnataka | 800 km | 81,155 sq km; tributaries Kabini, Bhavani, Amravati; flows year-round |
| Narmada | Amarkantak plateau (1,057 m) | 1,312 km | ~98,796 sq km; rift valley between Satpura & Vindhya; 27 km estuary; Sardar Sarovar Project |
| Tapi | Multai, Betul dist., MP | 724 km | 65,145 sq km; 79% Maharashtra, 15% MP, 6% Gujarat; flows in rift valley |
| Luni | Pushkar (Aravali, Rajasthan) | — | Ephemeral; ends in Rann of Kuchchh; entire system seasonal |
Figure 3.4: River length comparison (km) — the Godavari leads the Peninsular pack, followed closely by the Krishna; the Narmada and Tapi together drain the western rifts.
3.11 River Regimes — Himalayan vs Peninsular
A river's regime? is the pattern of variation in its discharge through the year. Two rivers can be the same length yet behave very differently; their regimes are fingerprints of climate, source, and rock type.
| Feature | Himalayan Rivers | Peninsular Rivers |
|---|---|---|
| Source of water | Both monsoon rain & melting snow / glaciers | Mainly monsoon rainfall only |
| Flow | Perennial — water all year round | Mostly seasonal; very low flow in dry months (except Kaveri) |
| Mountain reach | Deep gorges, V-shaped valleys, rapids, waterfalls | Broad, graded, shallow valleys |
| Plain/Plateau reach | Strong meandering tendency; ox-bow lakes, flood plains, braided channels, large deltas | Fixed course, very few meanders, hard-rock channel |
| Frequency of course-shifts | Frequent (Kosi, Brahmaputra) | Rare; Narmada & Tapi locked inside rifts |
| Sediment load | Very high (rapidly rising mountains) | Modest (long-eroded shield) |
| Characteristic mouth | Vast deltas (Sundarbans) | East-flowing build deltas; Narmada & Tapi form estuaries |
The Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri all build deltas; the Narmada and Tapi build estuaries instead. Both empty into the same Indian Ocean — so why the difference? In a short paragraph, explain how (a) the orientation of flow (east vs west), (b) the rift-valley setting, and (c) tidal energy of the receiving sea together determine whether a river ends in a delta or an estuary.
3.12 Extent of Usability — and the Linking of Rivers
India's rivers carry enormous volumes of water each year, but that water is unevenly distributed in time and space. Perennial rivers run all year; non-perennial ones nearly dry up between rains. A single monsoon can drown one state in floods while another suffers drought. The question that follows is sharp: is this a problem of availability of water — or of its management?
3.12.1 The Idea of Inter-Basin Linking
One ambitious response is to transfer surplus water from one basin to another that is in deficit. The Periyar Diversion Scheme, the Indira Gandhi Canal Project, the Kurnool–Cuddapah Canal, and the Beas–Satluj Link Canal are existing examples. Even more ambitiously, schemes like the proposed Ganga–Kaveri link would carry water from the Northern Plain to the dry Peninsula.
3.12.2 Six Big Problems with Indian River Water
- (i) Insufficient quantity in many regions during the dry season.
- (ii) River-water pollution from urban sewage and industrial effluents.
- (iii) Heavy load of silt — reduces channel capacity and reservoir life.
- (iv) Uneven seasonal flow — concentrated in a few monsoon months.
- (v) Disputes between states over the sharing of river waters.
- (vi) Shrinking of channels because settlements push outward into the riverbed (the thalweg?).
India's rivers are loaded with the dirty water of cities, industrial effluent, the ash of cremation grounds, and the flowers and statues immersed during festivals. Add bathing and washing of clothes, and the cumulative load on a riparian? ecosystem becomes severe. Schemes like the Ganga Action Plan and the more recent Namami Gange Programme attempt to tackle this on multiple fronts.
Organise a class debate on the question: "Resolved: India should aggressively pursue inter-basin river-linking projects to solve floods and droughts simultaneously." One side defends the engineering and food-security argument; the other side raises ecological, social and economic concerns (displacement, sediment loss in deltas, biodiversity, cost). Each side prepares a 5-point opening statement.
Competency-Based Questions — Peninsular Rivers & Regimes
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.