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Drainage System – Geography

Geography Notes for UPSC

The flow of water through well-defined channels is known as drainage ‘and the network of such channels is called a drainage system.

Is the outcome of the geological time period, nature and structure of rocks, topography, slope, amount of water flowing and the periodicity of the flow.

A river drains the water collected from a specific area, which is called its catchment area.

An area drained by a river and its tributaries is called a drainage basin.

The boundary line separating one drainage basin from the other is known as the watershed.

The catchments of large rivers are called river basins while those of small rivulets and rills are often referred to as watersheds.

The drainage pattern resembling the branches of a tree is known as —dendriticll the examples of which are the rivers of northern plain.

When the rivers originate from a hill and flow in all directions, the drainage pattern is known as radial. The rivers originating from the Amarkantak range present a good example of it.

The basis of discharge of water (orientations to the sea), it may be grouped into: l-the Arabian Sea drainage; (ii) the Bay of Bengal drainage.

They are separated from each other through the Delhi ridge, the Aravalis and the Sahyadris. Nearly 77 per cent of the drainage area consisting of the Ganga, the Brahmaputra, the Mahanadi, the Krishna, etc. is oriented towards the Bay of Bengal while 23 per cent comprising the Indus, the Narmada, the Tapi, the Mahi and the Periyar systems discharge their waters in the Arabian Sea.

On the basis of the size of the watershed, the drainage basins of India are grouped into three categories:

On the basis of the mode of origin, nature and characteristics, the Indian drainage may also be classified into the Himalayan drainage and the Peninsular drainage

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