1. Which river originates as well as ends in the territory of india?
Answers
Answer:
Chambal river originates and ends in the territory of India.
Answer:
Chambal river originates as well as ends in the territory of India
Explanation:
Chambal river:
The primary tributary of the Yamuna River, the Chambal River, begins in the Vindhya Range south of Mhow in western Madhya Pradesh. It travels from the north toward the state of Rajasthan in the southeast. Both its beginning and its end are located within Indian territory.
In Central and Northern India, the Chambal River is a tributary of the Yamuna River and is therefore a component of the larger Gangetic drainage system. The river goes through the state of Madhya Pradesh, then turns southeast to join the Yamuna in the state of Uttar Pradesh after briefly passing through Rajasthan and creating the border between the two states.
It is a fabled river that is mentioned in historical texts. On the southern slope of the Vindhya Range in Madhya Pradesh, south of Mhow town and close to Manpur, the perennial Chambal has its origins. Northwestern Madhya Pradesh's Malwa area is drained by the Chambal and its tributaries, whereas southeast Rajasthan is drained by the Banas, whose source is in the Aravalli Range. Five rivers, including the Chambal, Kwari, Yamuna, Sind, and Pahuj, confluence at Pachnada near Bharath in the state of Uttar Pradesh, on the outskirts of the districts of Bhind and Etawah.
The Chambal River is thought to be pollution-free and is home to a variety of riverine animals, such as the Gangetic river dolphin, skimmers, black-bellied terns, sarus cranes, and black-necked storks, as well as 2 species of crocodilians, the mugger and gharial, 8 species of freshwater turtles, smooth-coated otters, and more. The Mahabharata epic makes reference to the river Charmanwati (sometimes written Charmanvati). Charmanvati, which means the river on the banks of which leather is dried, is said to have been the Chambal River's original name. With time, this river gained notoriety as the "river of charman" (skin), and it was given the name Charmanvati.