Geography, asked by vineetbansal81, 11 months ago

explain the Indus River system ​

Answers

Answered by sumanchoudhary1784
0

you may get better ans on google

Answered by rockaditya45
1

Indus River System

Sindhu Sanskrit

Sinthos Greek

Sindus Latin

Major Rivers of Indus River System

Source

Length

Indus Glaciers of Kailas Range (Close to Manasarovar Lake) 2880 km total.

710 km in India

Jhelum Verinag 720 km

Chenab Bara Lacha Pass 1180 km

Ravi Near Rohtang Pass 725 km

Beas Near Rohtang Pass 460 km

Satluj Manasarovar-Rakas Lakes

List of important passes given in previous posts

1450 km total

1050 km in India

Indus river

India got her name from Indus.

‘The Indus Valley Civilization’ was born around this river.

It flows in north-west direction from its source (Glaciers of Kailas Range – Kailash range in Tibet near Lake Manasarovar) till the Nanga Parbhat Range.

It’s length is about 2,900 km. Its total drainage area is about 1,165,000 square km [more than half of it lies in semiarid plains of Pakistan]. It is joined by Dhar River near Indo-China border.

After entering J&K it flows between the Ladakh and the Zaskar Ranges. It flows through the regions of Ladakh, Baltistan and Gilgit.

The gradient of the river in J&K is very gentle (about 30 cm per km).

Average elevation at which the Indus flows through JK is about 4000 m above sea level.

It is joined by the Zaskar River at Leh (these kind of points are important for prelims).

Near Skardu, it is joined by the Shyok at an elevation of about 2,700 m.

The Gilgit, Gartang, Dras, Shiger, Hunza are the other Himalayan tributaries of the Indus.

It crosses the Himalayas (ends its mountainous journey) through a 5181 m deep gorge near Attock, lying north of the Nanga Parbat. It takes a sharp southerly bend here (syntaxial bend).

Kabul river from Afghanistan joins Indus near Attock. Thereafter it flows through the Potwar plateau and crosses the Salt Range (South Eastern edge of Potwar Plateau).

Some of the important tributaries below Attock include the Kurram, Toch and the Zhob-Gomal.

Just above Mithankot, the Indus receives from Panjnad (Panchnad), the accumulated waters of the five eastern tributaries—the Jhelum, the Chenab, the Ravi, the Beas and the Satluj.

The river empties into the Arabian Sea south of Karachi after forming a huge delta.

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