Geography, asked by ronakparikhbunty, 3 days ago

thw river chambal and betwa flowing from south meet in which river in north?​

Answers

Answered by jigneshkdb
3

Answer:

The Betwa (Hindi: बेतवा, Sanskrit: वेत्रवती) is a river in Northern India, and a tributary of the Yamuna. It rises in the Vindhya Range (Raisen) just north of Hoshangabad in Madhya Pradesh and flows northeast through Madhya Pradesh and Orchha to Uttar Pradesh.

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Betwa River.

Answered by tushargupta0691
0

Answer:

The Betwa River is referred to as Madhya Pradesh's Ganga. It rises in the Vindhyan range of the Hoshangabad district of Madhya Pradesh, flows along the Malwa to Orchha, and then converges with the Yamuna in the vicinity of Hamirpur in Uttar Pradesh. Yamuna River tributaries include Chambal and Betwa.

Explanation:

A tributary of the Yamuna is the Betwa or Betravati. It begins just north of Hoshangabad in the Vindhya Range of Madhya Pradesh and runs through Orchha and Madhya Pradesh before ending in Uttar Pradesh. The Narmada, Chambal, Son, and Tugabhadra rivers are other rivers that move northward from the south. Since the River Chambal is a tributary of the Yamuna in central India, it flows from south to north. It also flows into Rajasthan from Madhya Pradesh. At the Uttar Pradesh towns of Hamirpur and Etawah, the Chambal and Betwa rivers converge to form the Yamuna. As we travel east, the Yamuna joins the Ganga at Allahabad's Triveni Sangam. Near Patna, Bihar, the Son River merges with the Ganga.

In the Uttar Pradesh district of Hamirpur, close to Orchha, the Betwa and Yamuna rivers converge.

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