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Narmada River

The Narmada River, also called the Reva and previously also known as Narbada or anglicised as Nerbudda,[2] is the 5th longest river and overall longest west-flowing river in India. It is also the largest flowing river in the state of Madhya Pradesh. This river flows through the states of Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat in India. It is also known as the "Life Line of Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat" due to its huge contribution to the two states in many ways. The Narmada River rises from the Amarkantak Plateau in Anuppur district Madhya Pradesh. It forms the traditional boundary between North India and South India and flows westwards over a length of 1,312 km (815.2 mi) before draining through the Gulf of Khambhat into the Arabian Sea, 30 km (18.6 mi) west of Bharuch city of Gujarat.[3][4]

Narmada
At Bhedaghat in Jabalpur, India
Maps showing the course of the Narmada, selected tributaries, and the approximate extent of its drainage area
Location
CountryIndia
StateMadhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat
CityNarmadapuram, Budhni, Jabalpur, Dindori, Narsinghpur Harda, Mandhata, Omkareshwar, Barwaha, Mandleshwar, Maheshwar, Mandla, Bharuch, Rajpipla, Sinor (Vadodara District), Dabhoi (Vadodara District), Karjan (Vadodara District), Dharampuri
Physical characteristics
SourceNarmada Kund
 • locationVindhyachal Parvat Amarkantak Plateau, Anuppur district, Central India, Madhya Pradesh
 • coordinates22°40′0″N 81°45′0″E / 22.66667°N 81.75000°E / 22.66667; 81.75000
 • elevation1,048 m (3,438 ft)
MouthGulf of Khambhat (Arabian Sea)
 • location
Bharuch District, Gujarat
 • coordinates
21°39′3.77″N 72°48′42.8″E / 21.6510472°N 72.811889°E / 21.6510472; 72.811889Coordinates: 21°39′3.77″N 72°48′42.8″E / 21.6510472°N 72.811889°E / 21.6510472; 72.811889
 • elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length1,312 km (815 mi)approx.
Discharge 
 • average1,447 m3/s (51,100 cu ft/s)
Discharge 
 • locationGarudeshwar[1]
 • average1,216 m3/s (42,900 cu ft/s)
 • minimum10 m3/s (350 cu ft/s)
 • maximum11,246 m3/s (397,100 cu ft/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftKharmer, Burhner, Banjar, Temur, Sanair (Saner), Sher, Shakkar, Dudhi, Sukhri, Tawa, Hather, Ganjal, Ajnal, Machak, Chhota Tawa, Kaveri (MP), Khurkia, Kunda, Borad, Deb, Goi, Karjan
 • rightSilgi, Balai, Gaur, Hiran, Biranjo, Tendoni, Barna, Kolar (MP), Sip, Jamner, Chandrakeshar, Khari, Kenar, Choral, Karam, Man, Uri, Hathni, Orsang

It is one of only two major rivers in peninsular India that runs from east to west (longest west flowing river), along with the Tapti River. It is one of the rivers in India that flows in a rift valley, bordered by the Satpura and Vindhya ranges. As a rift valley river, the Narmada does not form a delta; Rift valley rivers form estuaries. Other rivers which flow through the rift valley include the Damodar River in Chota Nagpur Plateau and Tapti. The Tapti River and Mahi River also flow through rift valleys, but between different ranges. It flows through the states of Madhya Pradesh (1,077 km (669.2 mi)), and Maharashtra, (74 km (46.0 mi)), (39 km (24.2 mi)) (actually along the border between Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra (39 km (24.2 mi)) and then the border between Maharashtra and Gujarat (74 km (46.0 mi)) and in Gujarat (161 km (100.0 mi)).[5]

The Periplus Maris Erythraei (c. 80 AD) called the river the Namnadius (Ναμνάδιος),[6] Ptolemy called it Namadus (Νάμαδος) and Namades (Ναμάδης)[7] and the British Raj called it the Nerbudda or Narbada.[8] Narmada is a Sanskrit word meaning "The Giver of Pleasure".[9]

Course

 
Narmada Kund, origin at Amarkantak
 
Narmada River at Tilwara ghat, Jabalpur
 
River in Omkareshwar
 
The River Narmada flows through a gorge of Marble rocks in Bhedaghat
 
Side view of the Dhuandhar Falls seen during the monsoon season.

The source of the Narmada is a small reservoir, known as the Narmada Kund. It is located at Amarkantak on the Amarkantak Plateau[10][5] in the Anuppur District on Shahdol zone of eastern Madhya Pradesh.[11] The river descends from Sonmuda, then falls over a cliff as Kapildhara waterfall and meanders in the hills, flowing through a tortuous course crossing the rocks and islands up to the ruined palace of Ramnagar. Between Ramnagar and Mandla, (25 km (15.5 mi)), further southeast, the course is comparatively straight with deep water devoid of rocky obstacles. The Banger joins from the left. The river then runs north–west in a narrow loop towards Jabalpur. Close to this city, after a fall of some (9 m (29.5 ft)), called the Dhuandhara, the fall of mist, it flows for (3 km (1.9 mi)), in a deep narrow channel through the magnesium limestone and basalt rocks called the Marble Rocks; from a width of about 90 m (295.3 ft), above, it is compressed in this channel of (18 m (59.1 ft)), only. Beyond this point up to its meeting the Arabian Sea, the Narmada enters three narrow valleys between the Vindhya scarps in the north and the Satpura range in the South. The southern extension of the valley is wider at most places. These three valley sections are separated by the closely approaching line of the scarps and the Satpura hills.

 
Marble rocks alongside Narmada River

Emerging from the Marble Rocks the river enters its first fertile basin, which extends about 320 km (198.8 mi), with an average width of 35 km (21.7 mi), in the south. In the north, the valley is limited to the Barna–Bareli plain terminating at Barkhara Hills opposite Narmadapuram. However, the hills again recede in the Kannod plains. The banks are about (12 m (39.4 ft)) high. It is in the first valley of the Narmada that many of its important tributaries from the south join it and bring the waters of the northern slopes of the Satpura Hills.[2] Among them are: the Sher, the Shakkar, the Dudhi, the Tawa (biggest tributary) and the Ganjal. The Hiran, the Barna, the Choral, the Karam and the Lohar are the important tributaries joining from the north.

Below Handia and Nemawar to Hiran fall (the deer's leap), the river is approached by hills from both sides. In this stretch the character of the river is varied. Omkareshwar, sacred to Shiva is an important place of worship in Madhya Pradesh. At first, the descent is rapid and the stream, quickening in pace, rushes over a barrier of rocks. The Sikta and the Kaveri join it below the Khandwa plain. At two points, at Mandhar, about 40 km (24.9 mi) below Nemawar, and Dadrai, 40 km (24.9 mi) further down near Punasa, the river falls over a height of about 12 m (39.4 ft).

 
Narmada River at full flow during monsoon in Bhedaghat.

A few kilometres further down in Barwaha the Narmada enters the Mandleshwar plain, the second basin about 180 km (111.8 mi) long and 65 km (40.4 mi) wide in the south. The northern strip of the basin is only 25 km (15.5 mi). The second valley section is broken only by Saheshwar Dhara fall. The early course of about 125 km (77.7 mi) up to Markari falls is met with a succession of cataracts and rapids from the elevated table land of Malwa to the low level of Gujarat plain. Towards the west of this basin, the hills draw very close but soon dwindle down.[citation needed]

Below Makrai, the river flows between Vadodara district and Narmada district and then meanders through the rich plain of Bharuch district of Gujarat state. The banks are high between the layers of old alluvial deposits, hardened mud, gravels of nodular limestone and sand. The width of the river spans from about 1.5 km (0.9 mi) at Makrai to 3 km (1.9 mi) near Bharuch and to an estuary of 21 km (13.0 mi) at the Gulf of Cambay. An old channel of the river, 1 km (0.6 mi) to 2 km (1.2 mi) south from the present one, is very clear below Bharuch. The Karanjan and the Orsing are the most important tributaries in the original course. The former joins at Rundh and the latter at Vyas in Vadodara district of Gujarat, opposite each other and form a Triveni (confluence of three rivers) on the Narmada. The Amaravati and the Bhukhi are other tributaries of significance. Opposite the mouth of the Bhukhi is a large drift called Alia Bet or Kadaria Bet.[citation needed]

The tidal rise is felt up to 32 km (19.9 mi) above Bharuch, where the neap tides rise to about a metre and spring tide 3.5 m (11.5 ft). The river is navigable for vessels of the burthen of 95 tonnes (i.e., 380 Bombay candies) up to Bharuch and for vessels up to 35 tonnes (140 Bombay candies) up to Shamlapitha or Ghangdia. The small vessels (10 tonnes) voyage up to Tilakawada in Gujarat. There are sand bases and shoals at mouth and at Bharuch. The nearby island of Kabirvad, in the Narmada River, features a gigantic Banyan tree, which covers 10,000 square metres (2.5 acres).[12]

Narmada basin

 
Railway Bridge on river Narmada at Bharuch, Gujarat

The Narmada basin, hemmed between Vindhya and Satpura ranges, extends over an area of 98,796 km2 (38,145.3 sq mi) and lies on the northern extremity of the Deccan Plateau. The basin covers large areas in the states of Madhya Pradesh (82%), Gujarat (12%) and a comparatively smaller area in Maharashtra (4%) and in Chhattisgarh (2%). 60% of the basin is made up of arable land, 35% is forest cover and 5% is made up of other types of land such as grassland or wasteland.[13] In the entire course of the river of 1,312 km (815.2 mi), there are 41 tributaries, out of which 22 are from the Satpura range and the rest on the right bank are from the Vindhya range.[5] Dhupgarh (1,350 m), near Pachmarhi is the highest point of the Narmada basin.[14]

The basin has five well defined physiographic regions. They are:(1) The upper hilly areas covering parts of Anuppur, Mandla, Dindori, Balaghat and Seoni, (2) The upper plains covering parts of Jabalpur, Narsinghpur, Chhindwara, Narmadapuram, Betul, Harda, Raisen and Sehore districts, (3) The middle plains covering parts of Khandwa, Khargone, Dewas, Indore and Dhar, (4) The lower hilly areas covering parts of Barwani, Alirajpur, Nandurbar, Chhota Udepur and Narmada, and (5) the lower plains covering mainly the districts of Narmada, Bharuch, and parts of Vadodara district. The hill regions are well forested. The upper, middle and lower plains are broad and fertile areas, well suited for cultivation. The Narmada basin mainly consists of black soils. The coastal plains in Gujarat are composed of alluvial clays with a layer of black soils on the surface.[15]

The valley experiences extremes of hydrometeorological and climatic conditions with the upper catchment having an annual precipitation in the range of 1,000 mm (3.3 ft) to 1,850 mm (6.1 ft) and with half or even less than half in its lower regions (650 mm (2.1 ft)–750 mm (2.5 ft)); the diversity of vegetation from lush green in the upper region to dry deciduous teak forest vegetation in the lower region is testimony to this feature.[5]

Geology

About 160 million years ago, the supercontinent Pangea broke into two large masses. The northern part was Laurasia and the southern continental mass was Gondwana.[16] Between the two continents, a large sea, Tethys existed. Presently the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau have taken the position of the ancient Tethys Ocean. The Gondwana was intruded by few large marine transgressions. A deep gulf or sea existed along the Sindh-Baluchistan and Kutch. At one time, a marine ravine penetrated the very centre of Peninsular India through a narrow inlet along the present valley of Narmada. During this time India was divided into two halves by narrow strips of marine transgressions and there was no land communication between the Peninsular and northern India. Along the Narmada Valley, several patches of sediments have been deposited which contains ancient remains of animals. These fossils are similar to those found along the tracts of Tapi river. Such similarity probably suggests that even about 3 million years ago, Narmada and Tapi were confluent and the separate fate of these two rivers was decided by recent earth movements. The Bhedaghat falls of Narmada, near Jabalpur, was probably created during one such movement. The Narmada Valley is a graben, a layered block of the Earth's crust that dropped down relative to the blocks on either side due to ancient spreading of the Earth's crust. Two normal faults, known as the Narmada North fault and Narmada South fault, parallel to the river's course, and mark the boundary between the Narmada block and the Vindhya and Satpura blocks or Horsts which rose relative to the Narmada Graben. The Narmada's watershed includes the northern slopes of the Satpuras, and the steep southern slope of the Vindhyas, but not the Vindhyan tableland, the streams from which flow into the Ganges and Yamuna.[2]

Significance in Hinduism

 
A scenic view of Maheshwar on the banks of Narmada
 
Omkareshwar temple on the banks of Narmada river

Like the Ganges, the Narmada River is a goddess and a river in Hinduism. The Matsya Purana states that all of the banks along the Narmada are sacred.[17] Ptolemy called the Narmada River 'Nammadus' and the author of the Periplus called it 'Nammadios.'[18]

There are many stories about the origin of the Narmada River. According to the Reva Khand, the Narmada was created from Shiva's perspiration while he was performing penance on Mount Riksha.[17] Due to this, the Narmada River is known as Shiva's daughter.[17] In another legend, two teardrops fell from the eyes of Brahma, the creator of the universe, which yielded two rivers – the Narmada and the Son.[18]

Narmada is also considered sacred because of the pebbles known as banalinga that are found on the river bed. The pebbles are made up of white quartz and are linga shaped.[18] They are believed to be the personified form of Shiva and there is a popular saying, "Narmada Ke Kanker utte Sankar" which means that 'Shiva is in the pebbles of Narmada'.[19]

Adi Shankara met his guru Govinda Bhagavatpada in Omkareshwar, a town on the banks of the Narmada.[19]

Narmada is also said to have been engaged with the Sonbhadra, another river flowing on the Chota Nagpur Plateau. According to the Puranas, the Narmada is also called the Reva, from its leaping motion (from the root 'rev') through its rocky bed.[20]

The Narmada River is also worshipped as mother goddess Muktidayani, or liberating mother.[21]

The importance of the Narmada River as sacred is testified by the fact that the pilgrims perform a holy pilgrimage of a parikrama or circumambulation of the river.[22] The Narmada Parikrama, as it is called, is considered to be a meritorious act that a pilgrim can undertake.[2] Many sadhus and pilgrims walk on foot from the Arabian Sea at Bharuch in Gujarat, along the river, to the source in Maikal Mountains (Amarkantak hills) in Madhya Pradesh and back along the opposite bank of the river. It is a 2,600-kilometre (1,600 mi) walk.[23] The spiritual journey is usually taken for 3 years, 3 months and 13 days and the pilgrims are stipulated not to cross the river at any point of time.[24] Important towns of interest in the valley are Jabalpur, Barwaha, Narmadapuram, Harda, Narmada Nagar, Omkareshwar, Dewas (Nemavar, Kity, Pipri), Mandla and Maheshwar in Madhya Pradesh, and Rajpipla and Bharuch in Gujarat. Some places of historical interest are Joga Ka Quilla, Chhatri of Baji Rao Peshwa and Bhimbetka, and among the falls are the Dugdhdhara, Dhardi falls, Bheraghat, Dhuandhara, Kapiladhara and Sahastradhara.[25]

Ecology

 
Forests of Amarkantak
 
Bark of Lagerstroemia parviflora
 
Tigress with her two cubs in Kanha National Park

The lower Narmada River Valley and the surrounding uplands, covering an area of169,900 km2 (65,598.8 sq mi) consists of dry deciduous forests. The ecoregion lies between moister forests to the northeast, southeast, and southwest, which receive greater rainfall from the southeast monsoon, and the drier forests and scrublands of the Deccan to the south and Malwa and Gujarat to the west and northwest. The natural vegetation of the region is a three–tiered forest.[citation needed] Tectona grandis is the dominant canopy tree, in association with Diospyros melanoxylon, Dhaora (Anogeissus latifolia), Lagerstroemia parviflora, Terminalia tomentosa, Lannea coromandelica, Hardwickia binata and Boswellia serrata. Riparian areas along the regions' rivers and streams, which receive year– round water, are home to moist evergreen forests, whose dominant tree species are Terminalia arjuna, Syzygium cumini (Jambul), Syzygium Heyneanum, Salix tetrasperma, Homonoia riparia, and Vitex negundo.[26]

The ecoregion is home to 76 species of mammals and to 276 bird species, none of which are endemic.[26] About 30% of the ecoregion is covered in relatively intact vegetation. The ecoregion includes some large blocks of habitat in the Vindhya and Satpura ranges. About 5% of the ecoregion lies within protected areas, including Bandhavgarh, Panna, and Sanjay National Parks.

Some of the important national parks and wild life sanctuaries in the valley are the following-: Kanha National Park located in the upper reaches of Narmada, about 18 km (11.2 mi) from Mandla, boasts of several wild animals including the Tiger. Two tributaries of Narmada, namely, Sulkum and Banjar, flow through this park. It is one of the best National Parks of Asia, which has been described vividly by Rudyard Kipling in his famous creation The Jungle Book.[27][28]

Satpura National Park, set up in 1981, is located in Narmadapuram district of Madhya Pradesh. Its name is derived from Satpura hill ranges (Mahadeo hills) and covers an area of 524 km2 (202.3 sq mi) and along with the adjoining Bori and Panchmarhi Sanctuaries, provides 1,427 km2 (551.0 sq mi) of unique central Indian Highland ecosystem. Satpura National Park, being part of a unique ecosystem, is very rich in biodiversity. The fauna comprises tiger, leopard, sambar, chital, bhedki, nilgai, four-horned antelope, chinkara, gaur, wild boar, wild dog, sloth bear, black buck, fox, porcupine, flying squirrel, mouse deer, Indian giant squirrel. There are a variety of birds. Hornbill and peafowl are the common birds. The flora of the national park consists of mainly sal, teak, tendu, aonla, mahua, bael, bamboo, and a variety of grasses and medicinal plants.

Forest areas outside protected areas are also quite rich in floral and faunal diversity.

Mandla Plant Fossils National Park, Dindori National fossils park Ghughuya is situated in Dindori district of Madhya Pradesh in India. This national park has plants in fossil form that existed in India anywhere between 40 million and 150 million years ago spread over seven villages of Mandla District (Ghuguwa, Umaria, Deorakhurd, Barbaspur, Chanti-hills, Chargaon and Deori Kohani). The Mandla Plant Fossils National Park is an area that spreads over 274,100 m2 (2,950,387.8 sq ft). Such fossils are found in three other villages of the district also, but they lie outside the national park.[29][30]

The Pachmarhi Biosphere Reserve covers part of three civil districts viz., Narmadapuram, Betul and Chhindwara of Madhya Pradesh. The total area is 4,926.28 km2 (1,902.0 sq mi). It envelops three wildlife conservation units viz., Bori Sanctuary (518.00 km²), Satpura National Park (524.37 km2 (202.5 sq mi)), and Pachmarhi Sanctuary (461.37 km2 (178.1 sq mi)). Satpura National Park comprises the core zone and the remaining area of 4,501.91 km2 (1,738.2 sq mi)), surrounding the core zone serves as buffer zone. The area comprises 511 villages. The area exhibits variety of geological rock and soil formations. There is a wide spectrum of floral and faunal features that occupy the Satpura conservation area. It is one of the oldest forest reserves, which has an established tradition of scientific management of forests. It constitutes a large contiguous forest block that harbours a community of plant and animal species typical of the central highland region.[31]

Apart from the above national parks, there are also a number of natural preserves such as the Amarkantak, the Bagh Caves and the Bhedaghat. In compliance of the Environmental Action Plan for the Narmadasagar and Omkareswar HEPs, as per the recommendations of the Wildlife Institute of India three new protected areas may be created, which are, a) the Narmada National Park (496.70 km2), b) the Surmanya Sanctuary (126.67 km2) and c) Omkareshwar Sanctuary (119.96 km2) comprising a total area of 788.57 km2 (304.47 sq mi).[32]

Shoolpaneshwar Sanctuary in Gujarat, near the Sardar Sarovar dam site, previously called the Dumkal Sloth Bear Sanctuary (old sanctuary has been expanded four times) now covers an area of about 607 km2 (234.4 sq mi), comprises a major watershed feeding the Sardar Sarovar and Karjan reservoir (on the Karjan River, a tributary of Narmada in Gujarat). It is the habitat of mammals and a variety of birds, including eagles and hawks.[33][34]

Anthropological and archaeological sites

The development of the Narmada river has led to the inundation of some archaeological and architectural sites. The Department of Archaeology, Museums and Archives, Government of Madhya Pradesh, undertook rescue excavations in response, and transplanted a number of temples.[35] An attempt to comprehensively list and publish lost sites has been undertaken by Jürgen Neuss.[36] Many Dinosaur fossils have been found in the Narmada valley. The first fossil was discovered in 1828 by William Sleeman.[37] In 1982 fossil remains of Rajasaurus narmadensis, which lived in the Cretaceous Period, was discovered.[18]

River development

The Narmada river has a huge water resources potential, as much as 33,210,000 acre-feet (40.96 km3) of average annual flow (more than 90% of this flow occurring during the monsoon months of June – September), which according to estimates is greater than the combined annual flows of the Ravi, Beas and the Sutlej rivers, which feed the Indus basin. The 75% dependable flow is 28,000,000 acre-feet (35 km3).[38]

Sardar Sarovar Dam

As one of the 30 dams planned on river Narmada, the Sardar Sarovar Dam is the largest structure to be built. It is the second largest concrete dam in the world in terms of the volume of concrete used in its construction, after the Grand Coulee Dam across the Columbia River, US.[39][40] It is a part of the Narmada Valley Project, a large hydraulic engineering project involving the construction of a series of large irrigation and hydroelectricity multi-purpose dams on the Narmada River. After a number of cases before the Supreme Court of India (1999, 2000, 2003), by 2014 the Narmada Control Authority had approved a series of changes in the final height and the associated displacement caused by the increased reservoir, from the original 80 m (260 ft) to a final 163 m (535 ft) from foundation.[41][42]

Water dispute

Investigations for harnessing the Narmada waters began in 1945 to 1946 by A. N. Khosla who was the chairman of the Central Waterways, Irrigation and Navigation Commission (CWINC). In 1948 the Khosla Committee recommended that further investigations be carried out on four of the seven proposed sites. The four sites included Tawa, Bargi, Punasa and the Broach Barrage and Canal Project.[43] In 1951 CWNIC was renamed Central Waterways & Power Commission (CWPC) and in 1957 a senior member of the CWPC selected further investigations to be completed at Navagam, a site that fell under the Broach Project. Navagam eventually became CWPC's preferred site because the geography allowed the dam's height to be raised higher. In 1960, the federal Government of India's Ministry of Irrigation and Power consultant team recommended that the Navagam Dam height be raised in one phase and that the drought prone areas in then Bombay State (modern day Saurashtra and Kutch regions) receive irrigation.[43]

On 1 May 1960 Bombay state was separated into the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat. The Navagam Dam site and Broach Project fell under the newly formed State of Gujarat and further development and planning was given to the Gujarat State government.[43] The Gujarat State government began planning studies for harnessing Narmada's water past the Punasa site in Madhya Pradesh. At the same time, the Government of Madhya Pradesh was also finalising a separate report for the Punasa Project. The competing plans led to inter-State water conflicts to arise because the Narmada did not have enough water supply to meet the requirements as planned by the two states. This began inter-State conflicts that went on for several years until 1963 when the Chief Ministers of Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat arrived at a set of compromises called the Bhopal Agreement. Gujarat State ratified the agreement but Madhya Pradesh did not, which led to another impasse.[43]

To break the logjam, a high-level Committee was appointed by the Government of India (GOI) in September 1964. In 1965, the Committee prepared a Master Plan for the basin, which involved construction of 12 major projects in Madhya Pradesh and the Navagam Dam in Gujarat. Gujarat endorsed the proposal, but Maharashtra did not. After intense parleys failed to resolve the problem, in 1968 GOI agreed to establish the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal (NWDT) under the Interstate River Water Disputes Act of 1956 to adjudicate on the dispute relating to sharing of water of the interstate Narmada and its valley.[43]

After ten years of deliberations and taking into considering the development of the water resources of the basin as a whole gave its award December 1978.[44]

 
Layout of Water Resources Development Projects in the Narmada Basin in Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh

Even though the tribunal award resolved the initial issue of water sharing, the height of dam, benefit sharing and the mode of settlement of affected people caused serious difficulties in implementation, particularly of the Sardar Sarovar dam.[43]

The social movement Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) was formed to address environmental concerns and rehabilitation and resettlement of affected people. The movement created worldwide attention to the major development activity planned in the valley.[45] This resulted in the Bank conducting an Independent Review Mission (IRM) in 1991 of the Sardar Sarovar Project and identified several recommendations.[44] However, the IRM's report was neither accepted by the Government of India or the World Bank. Finally the Government of India decided to terminate further drawing from the World Bank loan and would complete the project with national resources.[44]

The Supreme Court has also deliberated on this issue for several years but finally upheld the Tribunal Award and allowed the construction to proceed, subject to conditions. The Court introduced a mechanism to monitor the progress of resettlement pari passu with the raising of the height of the dam through Grievance Redressal Authorities (GRA) in each of the party states. The court's decision referred in this document, given in the year 2000, after 7 years of deliberations, has paved the way for completing the project to attain full envisaged benefits.[46]

Narmada Canal

 
Waters flowing from Narmada Canal.

The Narmada canal brings water from the Sardar Sarovar dam to the states of Gujarat and Rajasthan. The canal is 532 km long, with 485 km in Gujarat and 75 km in Rajasthan. The Narmada canal has helped both states supply water to arid regions of Kutch and Saurashtra for irrigation purposes. The Narmada canal had covered over 68 percent of the proposed villages (6,513) by 2010 in Gujarat.[47][48]

Indirasagar Dam

 
Indirasagar Dam partially completed in 2008

The Indira Sagar Project (ISP) at Punasa is one of the 30 major projects proposed in the Narmada basin with the largest storage capacity in the country. The project is located near Punasa village, in Khandwa District, Madhya Pradesh. This Multipurpose River Valley Project envisages construction of a concrete gravity dam, 653 metres (2,142 ft) long and 92 metres (302 ft) high with gross storage capacity of the reservoir of 12.22 km3 (9,910,000 acre⋅ft) and live storage of 9.75 km3 (7,900,000 acre⋅ft) to provide an annual irrigation potential of 1,690 km2 (650 sq mi) and a generation of 1000 MW of hydropower. The project also ensures supply of 60,000 acre⋅ft (74,000,000 m3) of drinking water to rural areas in Khandwa district. In accordance with NWDT award, an annual regulated flow of 8,120,000 acre⋅ft (10.02 km3) shall be released to the Sardar Sarovar Project (SSP), ex-Maheshwar Project. The operation of Indira Sagar Project will be carried out in such a way as to facilitate the regulation of Sardar Sarovar.[citation needed]

The dam and the powerhouse have been completed, but storage has been restricted up to EL 260 m under orders of the High Court, Jabalpur from R&R consideration. All the units of the powerhouse have been commissioned and generation of power from the eight units of 125 MW capacity, each commenced from Jan 2004.[49] The irrigation component of the project is under a fairly advance stage of implementation.[citation needed]

See also

Bibliography

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  • Geoffrey Waring Maw (1991). Narmada, the life of a river. Marjorie Sykes.
  • Yoginder K. Alagh; Mahesh T. Pathak; D. T. Buch (1995). Narmada and Environment: An Assessment. Har-Anand Publications.
  • K. Sankaran Unni (1996). Ecology of River Narmada. APH Publishing. ISBN 978-81-7024-765-4.
  • Singh Bal Hartosh (2013). Water close over us: A journey along the Narmada. HarperCollins India. ISBN 978-9350297056.

References

  1. ^ "Narmada Basin Station: Garudeshwar". UNH/GRDC. Retrieved 1 October 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Nerbudda" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 388.
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  10. ^ "Chapter 3: Drainage System". India: Physical Environment. NCERT. March 2006. p. 27. ISBN 81-7450-538-5.
  11. ^ Chadhar, Mohanlal (2017), Amarakantak kshetra ka puravaibhava, SSDN, Publisher and Distributor, New Delhi, ISBN 978-93-8357-509-1
  12. ^ . traveliteindia.com. Archived from the original on 14 June 2008.
  13. ^ Gupta, Harish; Chakrapani, G. J. (1 August 2005). "Temporal and spatial variations in water flow and sediment load in Narmada River Basin, India: natural and man-made factors". Environmental Geology. 48 (4): 579–589. doi:10.1007/s00254-005-1314-2. S2CID 129789728.
  14. ^ "A short history of the Sardar Sarovar Dam on river Narmada". 17 September 2017.
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  16. ^ Neuß, Jürgen (2012). Narmadāparikramā - Circumambulation of the Narmadā River: On the Tradition of a Unique Hindu Pilgrimage. BRILL. ISBN 9789004230286.
  17. ^ a b c Eck, Diana (2012). India : a sacred geography. New York: Harmony. pp. 268–270.
  18. ^ a b c d Warrier, Shrikala (2014). Kamandalu : the seven sacred rivers of Hinduism. London: Mayur University London. pp. 134–140.
  19. ^ a b Omkareshwar and Maheshwar: Travel Guide. Goodearth Publications. 2011. pp. 13–27.
  20. ^ "Narmada River". India Water Portal Hindi. Retrieved 7 March 2023. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  21. ^ Today, Hinduism (1 January 2018). "Insight: The Benevolent Narmada River". Hinduism Today. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  22. ^ . Brill. Archived from the original on 17 September 2013. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  23. ^ "Narmada River". Mukti4u2.dk. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  24. ^ Natarajan, Padmini (September 2018). "The sacred Narmada parikrama". Tattvaloka. Sringeri: Sri Abhinava Vidyatheertha Mahaswamigal Educational Trust. XLI (6): 53–5. ISSN 0970-8901.
  25. ^ "Narmada Control Authority". NCA. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  26. ^ a b "Narmada Valley Dry Deciduous Forests". One Earth. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
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  28. ^ "Kanha National Park: Follow Mowgli's Footsteps - Europe Up Close". europeupclose.com. 21 January 2019. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
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  36. ^ J. Neuss (2012). "On the Loss of Cultural Heritage in the Narmada Valley". Berliner Indologische Studien. pp. 195–248. Archived from the original on 9 April 2013. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
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  40. ^ "Narendra Modi inaugurates Sardar Sarovar Dam". Al Jazeera. 17 September 2017. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  41. ^ "BBC News — SOUTH ASIA — Go-ahead for India dam project". BBC.
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  44. ^ a b c Wood, John R. (1993). "India's Narmada River Dams: Sardar Sarovar under Siege". Asian Survey. 33 (10): 968–984. doi:10.2307/2645096. JSTOR 2645096 – via JSTOR.
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Further reading

  • parikrama narmada maiya ki book by shree amrutlal vegad (hindi, gujarati)
  • Tire Tire narmada book by shree amrutlal vegad (hindi, gujarati)
  • Narmada Waters Dispute Tribunal Award (NWDTA)
  • Reports of Irrigation Commission, 1972.
  • A River Sutra, by Gita Mehta. Vintage Books, 1994. ISBN 0-679-75247-1.
  • Sharma, BhashaShukla.―Anthropomorphism of River Narmada: A cultural study of

A River Sutra. ―The Criterion: An International Journal in English 3.3 (Sep 2012). Web.

  • Sharma, Bhasha Shukla. ―Mapping culture through ‗A River Sutra‘: Tribal Myths,

Dialogism, and Meta-narratives in postcolonial Fiction.‖ Universal Journal of educational and general studies. 1.2. (February 2012)

narmada, river, also, called, reva, previously, also, known, narbada, anglicised, nerbudda, longest, river, overall, longest, west, flowing, river, india, also, largest, flowing, river, state, madhya, pradesh, this, river, flows, through, states, madhya, prade. The Narmada River also called the Reva and previously also known as Narbada or anglicised as Nerbudda 2 is the 5th longest river and overall longest west flowing river in India It is also the largest flowing river in the state of Madhya Pradesh This river flows through the states of Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat in India It is also known as the Life Line of Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat due to its huge contribution to the two states in many ways The Narmada River rises from the Amarkantak Plateau in Anuppur district Madhya Pradesh It forms the traditional boundary between North India and South India and flows westwards over a length of 1 312 km 815 2 mi before draining through the Gulf of Khambhat into the Arabian Sea 30 km 18 6 mi west of Bharuch city of Gujarat 3 4 NarmadaAt Bhedaghat in Jabalpur IndiaMaps showing the course of the Narmada selected tributaries and the approximate extent of its drainage areaLocationCountryIndiaStateMadhya Pradesh Maharashtra GujaratCityNarmadapuram Budhni Jabalpur Dindori Narsinghpur Harda Mandhata Omkareshwar Barwaha Mandleshwar Maheshwar Mandla Bharuch Rajpipla Sinor Vadodara District Dabhoi Vadodara District Karjan Vadodara District DharampuriPhysical characteristicsSourceNarmada Kund locationVindhyachal Parvat Amarkantak Plateau Anuppur district Central India Madhya Pradesh coordinates22 40 0 N 81 45 0 E 22 66667 N 81 75000 E 22 66667 81 75000 elevation1 048 m 3 438 ft MouthGulf of Khambhat Arabian Sea locationBharuch District Gujarat coordinates21 39 3 77 N 72 48 42 8 E 21 6510472 N 72 811889 E 21 6510472 72 811889 Coordinates 21 39 3 77 N 72 48 42 8 E 21 6510472 N 72 811889 E 21 6510472 72 811889 elevation0 m 0 ft Length1 312 km 815 mi approx Discharge average1 447 m3 s 51 100 cu ft s Discharge locationGarudeshwar 1 average1 216 m3 s 42 900 cu ft s minimum10 m3 s 350 cu ft s maximum11 246 m3 s 397 100 cu ft s Basin featuresTributaries leftKharmer Burhner Banjar Temur Sanair Saner Sher Shakkar Dudhi Sukhri Tawa Hather Ganjal Ajnal Machak Chhota Tawa Kaveri MP Khurkia Kunda Borad Deb Goi Karjan rightSilgi Balai Gaur Hiran Biranjo Tendoni Barna Kolar MP Sip Jamner Chandrakeshar Khari Kenar Choral Karam Man Uri Hathni OrsangIt is one of only two major rivers in peninsular India that runs from east to west longest west flowing river along with the Tapti River It is one of the rivers in India that flows in a rift valley bordered by the Satpura and Vindhya ranges As a rift valley river the Narmada does not form a delta Rift valley rivers form estuaries Other rivers which flow through the rift valley include the Damodar River in Chota Nagpur Plateau and Tapti The Tapti River and Mahi River also flow through rift valleys but between different ranges It flows through the states of Madhya Pradesh 1 077 km 669 2 mi and Maharashtra 74 km 46 0 mi 39 km 24 2 mi actually along the border between Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra 39 km 24 2 mi and then the border between Maharashtra and Gujarat 74 km 46 0 mi and in Gujarat 161 km 100 0 mi 5 The Periplus Maris Erythraei c 80 AD called the river the Namnadius Namnadios 6 Ptolemy called it Namadus Namados and Namades Namadhs 7 and the British Raj called it the Nerbudda or Narbada 8 Narmada is a Sanskrit word meaning The Giver of Pleasure 9 Contents 1 Course 2 Narmada basin 3 Geology 4 Significance in Hinduism 5 Ecology 6 Anthropological and archaeological sites 7 River development 7 1 Sardar Sarovar Dam 7 1 1 Water dispute 7 1 2 Narmada Canal 7 2 Indirasagar Dam 8 See also 9 Bibliography 10 References 11 Further readingCourse Edit Narmada Kund origin at Amarkantak Narmada River at Tilwara ghat Jabalpur River in Omkareshwar The River Narmada flows through a gorge of Marble rocks in Bhedaghat Side view of the Dhuandhar Falls seen during the monsoon season The source of the Narmada is a small reservoir known as the Narmada Kund It is located at Amarkantak on the Amarkantak Plateau 10 5 in the Anuppur District on Shahdol zone of eastern Madhya Pradesh 11 The river descends from Sonmuda then falls over a cliff as Kapildhara waterfall and meanders in the hills flowing through a tortuous course crossing the rocks and islands up to the ruined palace of Ramnagar Between Ramnagar and Mandla 25 km 15 5 mi further southeast the course is comparatively straight with deep water devoid of rocky obstacles The Banger joins from the left The river then runs north west in a narrow loop towards Jabalpur Close to this city after a fall of some 9 m 29 5 ft called the Dhuandhara the fall of mist it flows for 3 km 1 9 mi in a deep narrow channel through the magnesium limestone and basalt rocks called the Marble Rocks from a width of about 90 m 295 3 ft above it is compressed in this channel of 18 m 59 1 ft only Beyond this point up to its meeting the Arabian Sea the Narmada enters three narrow valleys between the Vindhya scarps in the north and the Satpura range in the South The southern extension of the valley is wider at most places These three valley sections are separated by the closely approaching line of the scarps and the Satpura hills Marble rocks alongside Narmada River Emerging from the Marble Rocks the river enters its first fertile basin which extends about 320 km 198 8 mi with an average width of 35 km 21 7 mi in the south In the north the valley is limited to the Barna Bareli plain terminating at Barkhara Hills opposite Narmadapuram However the hills again recede in the Kannod plains The banks are about 12 m 39 4 ft high It is in the first valley of the Narmada that many of its important tributaries from the south join it and bring the waters of the northern slopes of the Satpura Hills 2 Among them are the Sher the Shakkar the Dudhi the Tawa biggest tributary and the Ganjal The Hiran the Barna the Choral the Karam and the Lohar are the important tributaries joining from the north Below Handia and Nemawar to Hiran fall the deer s leap the river is approached by hills from both sides In this stretch the character of the river is varied Omkareshwar sacred to Shiva is an important place of worship in Madhya Pradesh At first the descent is rapid and the stream quickening in pace rushes over a barrier of rocks The Sikta and the Kaveri join it below the Khandwa plain At two points at Mandhar about 40 km 24 9 mi below Nemawar and Dadrai 40 km 24 9 mi further down near Punasa the river falls over a height of about 12 m 39 4 ft Narmada River at full flow during monsoon in Bhedaghat A few kilometres further down in Barwaha the Narmada enters the Mandleshwar plain the second basin about 180 km 111 8 mi long and 65 km 40 4 mi wide in the south The northern strip of the basin is only 25 km 15 5 mi The second valley section is broken only by Saheshwar Dhara fall The early course of about 125 km 77 7 mi up to Markari falls is met with a succession of cataracts and rapids from the elevated table land of Malwa to the low level of Gujarat plain Towards the west of this basin the hills draw very close but soon dwindle down citation needed Below Makrai the river flows between Vadodara district and Narmada district and then meanders through the rich plain of Bharuch district of Gujarat state The banks are high between the layers of old alluvial deposits hardened mud gravels of nodular limestone and sand The width of the river spans from about 1 5 km 0 9 mi at Makrai to 3 km 1 9 mi near Bharuch and to an estuary of 21 km 13 0 mi at the Gulf of Cambay An old channel of the river 1 km 0 6 mi to 2 km 1 2 mi south from the present one is very clear below Bharuch The Karanjan and the Orsing are the most important tributaries in the original course The former joins at Rundh and the latter at Vyas in Vadodara district of Gujarat opposite each other and form a Triveni confluence of three rivers on the Narmada The Amaravati and the Bhukhi are other tributaries of significance Opposite the mouth of the Bhukhi is a large drift called Alia Bet or Kadaria Bet citation needed The tidal rise is felt up to 32 km 19 9 mi above Bharuch where the neap tides rise to about a metre and spring tide 3 5 m 11 5 ft The river is navigable for vessels of the burthen of 95 tonnes i e 380 Bombay candies up to Bharuch and for vessels up to 35 tonnes 140 Bombay candies up to Shamlapitha or Ghangdia The small vessels 10 tonnes voyage up to Tilakawada in Gujarat There are sand bases and shoals at mouth and at Bharuch The nearby island of Kabirvad in the Narmada River features a gigantic Banyan tree which covers 10 000 square metres 2 5 acres 12 Narmada basin Edit Railway Bridge on river Narmada at Bharuch Gujarat The Narmada basin hemmed between Vindhya and Satpura ranges extends over an area of 98 796 km2 38 145 3 sq mi and lies on the northern extremity of the Deccan Plateau The basin covers large areas in the states of Madhya Pradesh 82 Gujarat 12 and a comparatively smaller area in Maharashtra 4 and in Chhattisgarh 2 60 of the basin is made up of arable land 35 is forest cover and 5 is made up of other types of land such as grassland or wasteland 13 In the entire course of the river of 1 312 km 815 2 mi there are 41 tributaries out of which 22 are from the Satpura range and the rest on the right bank are from the Vindhya range 5 Dhupgarh 1 350 m near Pachmarhi is the highest point of the Narmada basin 14 The basin has five well defined physiographic regions They are 1 The upper hilly areas covering parts of Anuppur Mandla Dindori Balaghat and Seoni 2 The upper plains covering parts of Jabalpur Narsinghpur Chhindwara Narmadapuram Betul Harda Raisen and Sehore districts 3 The middle plains covering parts of Khandwa Khargone Dewas Indore and Dhar 4 The lower hilly areas covering parts of Barwani Alirajpur Nandurbar Chhota Udepur and Narmada and 5 the lower plains covering mainly the districts of Narmada Bharuch and parts of Vadodara district The hill regions are well forested The upper middle and lower plains are broad and fertile areas well suited for cultivation The Narmada basin mainly consists of black soils The coastal plains in Gujarat are composed of alluvial clays with a layer of black soils on the surface 15 The valley experiences extremes of hydrometeorological and climatic conditions with the upper catchment having an annual precipitation in the range of 1 000 mm 3 3 ft to 1 850 mm 6 1 ft and with half or even less than half in its lower regions 650 mm 2 1 ft 750 mm 2 5 ft the diversity of vegetation from lush green in the upper region to dry deciduous teak forest vegetation in the lower region is testimony to this feature 5 Geology EditAbout 160 million years ago the supercontinent Pangea broke into two large masses The northern part was Laurasia and the southern continental mass was Gondwana 16 Between the two continents a large sea Tethys existed Presently the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau have taken the position of the ancient Tethys Ocean The Gondwana was intruded by few large marine transgressions A deep gulf or sea existed along the Sindh Baluchistan and Kutch At one time a marine ravine penetrated the very centre of Peninsular India through a narrow inlet along the present valley of Narmada During this time India was divided into two halves by narrow strips of marine transgressions and there was no land communication between the Peninsular and northern India Along the Narmada Valley several patches of sediments have been deposited which contains ancient remains of animals These fossils are similar to those found along the tracts of Tapi river Such similarity probably suggests that even about 3 million years ago Narmada and Tapi were confluent and the separate fate of these two rivers was decided by recent earth movements The Bhedaghat falls of Narmada near Jabalpur was probably created during one such movement The Narmada Valley is a graben a layered block of the Earth s crust that dropped down relative to the blocks on either side due to ancient spreading of the Earth s crust Two normal faults known as the Narmada North fault and Narmada South fault parallel to the river s course and mark the boundary between the Narmada block and the Vindhya and Satpura blocks or Horsts which rose relative to the Narmada Graben The Narmada s watershed includes the northern slopes of the Satpuras and the steep southern slope of the Vindhyas but not the Vindhyan tableland the streams from which flow into the Ganges and Yamuna 2 Significance in Hinduism Edit A scenic view of Maheshwar on the banks of Narmada Omkareshwar temple on the banks of Narmada river Like the Ganges the Narmada River is a goddess and a river in Hinduism The Matsya Purana states that all of the banks along the Narmada are sacred 17 Ptolemy called the Narmada River Nammadus and the author of the Periplus called it Nammadios 18 There are many stories about the origin of the Narmada River According to the Reva Khand the Narmada was created from Shiva s perspiration while he was performing penance on Mount Riksha 17 Due to this the Narmada River is known as Shiva s daughter 17 In another legend two teardrops fell from the eyes of Brahma the creator of the universe which yielded two rivers the Narmada and the Son 18 Narmada is also considered sacred because of the pebbles known as banalinga that are found on the river bed The pebbles are made up of white quartz and are linga shaped 18 They are believed to be the personified form of Shiva and there is a popular saying Narmada Ke Kanker utte Sankar which means that Shiva is in the pebbles of Narmada 19 Adi Shankara met his guru Govinda Bhagavatpada in Omkareshwar a town on the banks of the Narmada 19 Narmada is also said to have been engaged with the Sonbhadra another river flowing on the Chota Nagpur Plateau According to the Puranas the Narmada is also called the Reva from its leaping motion from the root rev through its rocky bed 20 The Narmada River is also worshipped as mother goddess Muktidayani or liberating mother 21 The importance of the Narmada River as sacred is testified by the fact that the pilgrims perform a holy pilgrimage of a parikrama or circumambulation of the river 22 The Narmada Parikrama as it is called is considered to be a meritorious act that a pilgrim can undertake 2 Many sadhus and pilgrims walk on foot from the Arabian Sea at Bharuch in Gujarat along the river to the source in Maikal Mountains Amarkantak hills in Madhya Pradesh and back along the opposite bank of the river It is a 2 600 kilometre 1 600 mi walk 23 The spiritual journey is usually taken for 3 years 3 months and 13 days and the pilgrims are stipulated not to cross the river at any point of time 24 Important towns of interest in the valley are Jabalpur Barwaha Narmadapuram Harda Narmada Nagar Omkareshwar Dewas Nemavar Kity Pipri Mandla and Maheshwar in Madhya Pradesh and Rajpipla and Bharuch in Gujarat Some places of historical interest are Joga Ka Quilla Chhatri of Baji Rao Peshwa and Bhimbetka and among the falls are the Dugdhdhara Dhardi falls Bheraghat Dhuandhara Kapiladhara and Sahastradhara 25 Ecology Edit Forests of Amarkantak Bark of Lagerstroemia parviflora Tigress with her two cubs in Kanha National Park The lower Narmada River Valley and the surrounding uplands covering an area of169 900 km2 65 598 8 sq mi consists of dry deciduous forests The ecoregion lies between moister forests to the northeast southeast and southwest which receive greater rainfall from the southeast monsoon and the drier forests and scrublands of the Deccan to the south and Malwa and Gujarat to the west and northwest The natural vegetation of the region is a three tiered forest citation needed Tectona grandis is the dominant canopy tree in association with Diospyros melanoxylon Dhaora Anogeissus latifolia Lagerstroemia parviflora Terminalia tomentosa Lannea coromandelica Hardwickia binata and Boswellia serrata Riparian areas along the regions rivers and streams which receive year round water are home to moist evergreen forests whose dominant tree species are Terminalia arjuna Syzygium cumini Jambul Syzygium Heyneanum Salix tetrasperma Homonoia riparia and Vitex negundo 26 The ecoregion is home to 76 species of mammals and to 276 bird species none of which are endemic 26 About 30 of the ecoregion is covered in relatively intact vegetation The ecoregion includes some large blocks of habitat in the Vindhya and Satpura ranges About 5 of the ecoregion lies within protected areas including Bandhavgarh Panna and Sanjay National Parks Some of the important national parks and wild life sanctuaries in the valley are the following Kanha National Park located in the upper reaches of Narmada about 18 km 11 2 mi from Mandla boasts of several wild animals including the Tiger Two tributaries of Narmada namely Sulkum and Banjar flow through this park It is one of the best National Parks of Asia which has been described vividly by Rudyard Kipling in his famous creation The Jungle Book 27 28 Satpura National Park set up in 1981 is located in Narmadapuram district of Madhya Pradesh Its name is derived from Satpura hill ranges Mahadeo hills and covers an area of 524 km2 202 3 sq mi and along with the adjoining Bori and Panchmarhi Sanctuaries provides 1 427 km2 551 0 sq mi of unique central Indian Highland ecosystem Satpura National Park being part of a unique ecosystem is very rich in biodiversity The fauna comprises tiger leopard sambar chital bhedki nilgai four horned antelope chinkara gaur wild boar wild dog sloth bear black buck fox porcupine flying squirrel mouse deer Indian giant squirrel There are a variety of birds Hornbill and peafowl are the common birds The flora of the national park consists of mainly sal teak tendu aonla mahua bael bamboo and a variety of grasses and medicinal plants Forest areas outside protected areas are also quite rich in floral and faunal diversity Mandla Plant Fossils National Park Dindori National fossils park Ghughuya is situated in Dindori district of Madhya Pradesh in India This national park has plants in fossil form that existed in India anywhere between 40 million and 150 million years ago spread over seven villages of Mandla District Ghuguwa Umaria Deorakhurd Barbaspur Chanti hills Chargaon and Deori Kohani The Mandla Plant Fossils National Park is an area that spreads over 274 100 m2 2 950 387 8 sq ft Such fossils are found in three other villages of the district also but they lie outside the national park 29 30 The Pachmarhi Biosphere Reserve covers part of three civil districts viz Narmadapuram Betul and Chhindwara of Madhya Pradesh The total area is 4 926 28 km2 1 902 0 sq mi It envelops three wildlife conservation units viz Bori Sanctuary 518 00 km Satpura National Park 524 37 km2 202 5 sq mi and Pachmarhi Sanctuary 461 37 km2 178 1 sq mi Satpura National Park comprises the core zone and the remaining area of 4 501 91 km2 1 738 2 sq mi surrounding the core zone serves as buffer zone The area comprises 511 villages The area exhibits variety of geological rock and soil formations There is a wide spectrum of floral and faunal features that occupy the Satpura conservation area It is one of the oldest forest reserves which has an established tradition of scientific management of forests It constitutes a large contiguous forest block that harbours a community of plant and animal species typical of the central highland region 31 Apart from the above national parks there are also a number of natural preserves such as the Amarkantak the Bagh Caves and the Bhedaghat In compliance of the Environmental Action Plan for the Narmadasagar and Omkareswar HEPs as per the recommendations of the Wildlife Institute of India three new protected areas may be created which are a the Narmada National Park 496 70 km2 b the Surmanya Sanctuary 126 67 km2 and c Omkareshwar Sanctuary 119 96 km2 comprising a total area of 788 57 km2 304 47 sq mi 32 Shoolpaneshwar Sanctuary in Gujarat near the Sardar Sarovar dam site previously called the Dumkal Sloth Bear Sanctuary old sanctuary has been expanded four times now covers an area of about 607 km2 234 4 sq mi comprises a major watershed feeding the Sardar Sarovar and Karjan reservoir on the Karjan River a tributary of Narmada in Gujarat It is the habitat of mammals and a variety of birds including eagles and hawks 33 34 Anthropological and archaeological sites EditThe development of the Narmada river has led to the inundation of some archaeological and architectural sites The Department of Archaeology Museums and Archives Government of Madhya Pradesh undertook rescue excavations in response and transplanted a number of temples 35 An attempt to comprehensively list and publish lost sites has been undertaken by Jurgen Neuss 36 Many Dinosaur fossils have been found in the Narmada valley The first fossil was discovered in 1828 by William Sleeman 37 In 1982 fossil remains of Rajasaurus narmadensis which lived in the Cretaceous Period was discovered 18 River development EditThe Narmada river has a huge water resources potential as much as 33 210 000 acre feet 40 96 km3 of average annual flow more than 90 of this flow occurring during the monsoon months of June September which according to estimates is greater than the combined annual flows of the Ravi Beas and the Sutlej rivers which feed the Indus basin The 75 dependable flow is 28 000 000 acre feet 35 km3 38 Sardar Sarovar Dam Edit Main article Sardar Sarovar Dam As one of the 30 dams planned on river Narmada the Sardar Sarovar Dam is the largest structure to be built It is the second largest concrete dam in the world in terms of the volume of concrete used in its construction after the Grand Coulee Dam across the Columbia River US 39 40 It is a part of the Narmada Valley Project a large hydraulic engineering project involving the construction of a series of large irrigation and hydroelectricity multi purpose dams on the Narmada River After a number of cases before the Supreme Court of India 1999 2000 2003 by 2014 the Narmada Control Authority had approved a series of changes in the final height and the associated displacement caused by the increased reservoir from the original 80 m 260 ft to a final 163 m 535 ft from foundation 41 42 Water dispute Edit Investigations for harnessing the Narmada waters began in 1945 to 1946 by A N Khosla who was the chairman of the Central Waterways Irrigation and Navigation Commission CWINC In 1948 the Khosla Committee recommended that further investigations be carried out on four of the seven proposed sites The four sites included Tawa Bargi Punasa and the Broach Barrage and Canal Project 43 In 1951 CWNIC was renamed Central Waterways amp Power Commission CWPC and in 1957 a senior member of the CWPC selected further investigations to be completed at Navagam a site that fell under the Broach Project Navagam eventually became CWPC s preferred site because the geography allowed the dam s height to be raised higher In 1960 the federal Government of India s Ministry of Irrigation and Power consultant team recommended that the Navagam Dam height be raised in one phase and that the drought prone areas in then Bombay State modern day Saurashtra and Kutch regions receive irrigation 43 On 1 May 1960 Bombay state was separated into the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat The Navagam Dam site and Broach Project fell under the newly formed State of Gujarat and further development and planning was given to the Gujarat State government 43 The Gujarat State government began planning studies for harnessing Narmada s water past the Punasa site in Madhya Pradesh At the same time the Government of Madhya Pradesh was also finalising a separate report for the Punasa Project The competing plans led to inter State water conflicts to arise because the Narmada did not have enough water supply to meet the requirements as planned by the two states This began inter State conflicts that went on for several years until 1963 when the Chief Ministers of Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat arrived at a set of compromises called the Bhopal Agreement Gujarat State ratified the agreement but Madhya Pradesh did not which led to another impasse 43 To break the logjam a high level Committee was appointed by the Government of India GOI in September 1964 In 1965 the Committee prepared a Master Plan for the basin which involved construction of 12 major projects in Madhya Pradesh and the Navagam Dam in Gujarat Gujarat endorsed the proposal but Maharashtra did not After intense parleys failed to resolve the problem in 1968 GOI agreed to establish the Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal NWDT under the Interstate River Water Disputes Act of 1956 to adjudicate on the dispute relating to sharing of water of the interstate Narmada and its valley 43 After ten years of deliberations and taking into considering the development of the water resources of the basin as a whole gave its award December 1978 44 Layout of Water Resources Development Projects in the Narmada Basin in Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh Even though the tribunal award resolved the initial issue of water sharing the height of dam benefit sharing and the mode of settlement of affected people caused serious difficulties in implementation particularly of the Sardar Sarovar dam 43 The social movement Narmada Bachao Andolan NBA was formed to address environmental concerns and rehabilitation and resettlement of affected people The movement created worldwide attention to the major development activity planned in the valley 45 This resulted in the Bank conducting an Independent Review Mission IRM in 1991 of the Sardar Sarovar Project and identified several recommendations 44 However the IRM s report was neither accepted by the Government of India or the World Bank Finally the Government of India decided to terminate further drawing from the World Bank loan and would complete the project with national resources 44 The Supreme Court has also deliberated on this issue for several years but finally upheld the Tribunal Award and allowed the construction to proceed subject to conditions The Court introduced a mechanism to monitor the progress of resettlement pari passu with the raising of the height of the dam through Grievance Redressal Authorities GRA in each of the party states The court s decision referred in this document given in the year 2000 after 7 years of deliberations has paved the way for completing the project to attain full envisaged benefits 46 Narmada Canal Edit Main article Narmada Canal Waters flowing from Narmada Canal The Narmada canal brings water from the Sardar Sarovar dam to the states of Gujarat and Rajasthan The canal is 532 km long with 485 km in Gujarat and 75 km in Rajasthan The Narmada canal has helped both states supply water to arid regions of Kutch and Saurashtra for irrigation purposes The Narmada canal had covered over 68 percent of the proposed villages 6 513 by 2010 in Gujarat 47 48 Indirasagar Dam Edit Main article Indirasagar Dam Indirasagar Dam partially completed in 2008 The Indira Sagar Project ISP at Punasa is one of the 30 major projects proposed in the Narmada basin with the largest storage capacity in the country The project is located near Punasa village in Khandwa District Madhya Pradesh This Multipurpose River Valley Project envisages construction of a concrete gravity dam 653 metres 2 142 ft long and 92 metres 302 ft high with gross storage capacity of the reservoir of 12 22 km3 9 910 000 acre ft and live storage of 9 75 km3 7 900 000 acre ft to provide an annual irrigation potential of 1 690 km2 650 sq mi and a generation of 1000 MW of hydropower The project also ensures supply of 60 000 acre ft 74 000 000 m3 of drinking water to rural areas in Khandwa district In accordance with NWDT award an annual regulated flow of 8 120 000 acre ft 10 02 km3 shall be released to the Sardar Sarovar Project SSP ex Maheshwar Project The operation of Indira Sagar Project will be carried out in such a way as to facilitate the regulation of Sardar Sarovar citation needed The dam and the powerhouse have been completed but storage has been restricted up to EL 260 m under orders of the High Court Jabalpur from R amp R consideration All the units of the powerhouse have been commissioned and generation of power from the eight units of 125 MW capacity each commenced from Jan 2004 49 The irrigation component of the project is under a fairly advance stage of implementation citation needed See also EditList of rivers of India Narmada Pushkaram Indian festivalPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback 3rd Narmada Bridge bridge in IndiaPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Bhadbhut barrageBibliography EditSrivastava Pankaj 2007 Jungle Rahe taki Narmada Bahe Hindi Narmada Conservation Initiative Indore Weir Shelagh The Gonds of central India The Material Culture of the Gonds of Chhindwara District Madhya Pradesh London British Museum 1973 Geoffrey Waring Maw 1991 Narmada the life of a river Marjorie Sykes Yoginder K Alagh Mahesh T Pathak D T Buch 1995 Narmada and Environment An Assessment Har Anand Publications K Sankaran Unni 1996 Ecology of River Narmada APH Publishing ISBN 978 81 7024 765 4 Singh Bal Hartosh 2013 Water close over us A journey along the Narmada HarperCollins India ISBN 978 9350297056 References Edit Narmada Basin Station Garudeshwar UNH GRDC Retrieved 1 October 2013 a b c d Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Nerbudda Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 388 Narmada Valley Development Authority NVDA Government of Madhya Pradesh Narmada Basin Narmada Water Dispute Nvda nic in 16 July 1985 Archived from the original on 28 May 2014 Retrieved 3 March 2014 Narmada River Map a b c d Narmada Control Authority NCA Retrieved 21 March 2013 paragraph 42 Ntz info Retrieved 21 March 2013 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 NAARDA NAARDA NAMADUS www perseus tufts edu 11th edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary Sanskrit lexicon uni koeln de Chapter 3 Drainage System India Physical Environment NCERT March 2006 p 27 ISBN 81 7450 538 5 Chadhar Mohanlal 2017 Amarakantak kshetra ka puravaibhava SSDN Publisher and Distributor New Delhi ISBN 978 93 8357 509 1 Gujarat traveliteindia com Archived from the original on 14 June 2008 Gupta Harish Chakrapani G J 1 August 2005 Temporal and spatial variations in water flow and sediment load in Narmada River Basin India natural and man made factors Environmental Geology 48 4 579 589 doi 10 1007 s00254 005 1314 2 S2CID 129789728 A short history of the Sardar Sarovar Dam on river Narmada 17 September 2017 1 Archived 4 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Neuss Jurgen 2012 Narmadaparikrama Circumambulation of the Narmada River On the Tradition of a Unique Hindu Pilgrimage BRILL ISBN 9789004230286 a b c Eck Diana 2012 India a sacred geography New York Harmony pp 268 270 a b c d Warrier Shrikala 2014 Kamandalu the seven sacred rivers of Hinduism London Mayur University London pp 134 140 a b Omkareshwar and Maheshwar Travel Guide Goodearth Publications 2011 pp 13 27 Narmada River India Water Portal Hindi Retrieved 7 March 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Today Hinduism 1 January 2018 Insight The Benevolent Narmada River Hinduism Today Retrieved 7 March 2023 Narmadaparikrama Circumambulation of the Narmada River Brill Archived from the original on 17 September 2013 Retrieved 3 March 2014 Narmada River Mukti4u2 dk Retrieved 21 March 2013 Natarajan Padmini September 2018 The sacred Narmada parikrama Tattvaloka Sringeri Sri Abhinava Vidyatheertha Mahaswamigal Educational Trust XLI 6 53 5 ISSN 0970 8901 Narmada Control Authority NCA Retrieved 21 March 2013 a b Narmada Valley Dry Deciduous Forests One Earth Retrieved 2 March 2023 Kanha National Park India WorldAtlas 12 June 2021 Retrieved 4 March 2023 Kanha National Park Follow Mowgli s Footsteps Europe Up Close europeupclose com 21 January 2019 Retrieved 4 March 2023 6 5 crore year old fossil in Ghughua Vikas Kumar The Sunday Indian www thesundayindian com Retrieved 2 March 2023 Fossil National Park An official website of Dindori District Madhya Pradesh INDIA 25 February 2013 Archived from the original on 25 February 2013 Retrieved 2 March 2023 Microsoft Word AD021full doc PDF Retrieved 21 March 2013 2 Archived 19 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Narmada Control Authority NCA 3 June 1987 Retrieved 21 March 2013 India Travel guide India traveltoworld com Archived from the original on 19 June 2015 Retrieved 21 March 2013 Department of Archaeology Mparchaeology org Archived from the original on 27 December 2013 Retrieved 24 December 2013 J Neuss 2012 On the Loss of Cultural Heritage in the Narmada Valley Berliner Indologische Studien pp 195 248 Archived from the original on 9 April 2013 Retrieved 3 March 2014 Centre UNESCO World Heritage Bhedaghat Lametaghat in Narmada Valley UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 20 July 2022 Narmada Control Authority Homepage Nca gov in Retrieved 3 March 2014 PM Modito inaugurate world s second biggest dam on September 17 The Indian Express Indo Asian News Service 14 September 2017 Retrieved 31 December 2018 Narendra Modi inaugurates Sardar Sarovar Dam Al Jazeera 17 September 2017 Retrieved 31 December 2018 BBC News SOUTH ASIA Go ahead for India dam project BBC Sardar Sarovar Power Complex Narmada Control Authority Retrieved 20 January 2012 a b c d e f Khagram Sanjeev 2004 Dams and Development Transnational Struggles for Water and Power Cornell University Press pp 67 76 ISBN 9780801442285 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctv3mtbqn a b c Wood John R 1993 India s Narmada River Dams Sardar Sarovar under Siege Asian Survey 33 10 968 984 doi 10 2307 2645096 JSTOR 2645096 via JSTOR 1985 Narmada Bachao Andolan frontline thehindu com 15 August 2022 Retrieved 15 March 2023 3 Archived 3 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Canal fully functional villagers cheer as Narmada water approaches Kutch The Indian Express 7 July 2022 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Good news The Narmada canal project miracle in Rajasthan India Today Retrieved 14 March 2023 4 Archived 3 March 2014 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading Editparikrama narmada maiya ki book by shree amrutlal vegad hindi gujarati Tire Tire narmada book by shree amrutlal vegad hindi gujarati Narmada Waters Dispute Tribunal Award NWDTA Reports of Irrigation Commission 1972 A River Sutra by Gita Mehta Vintage Books 1994 ISBN 0 679 75247 1 Sharma BhashaShukla Anthropomorphism of River Narmada A cultural study ofA River Sutra The Criterion An International Journal in English 3 3 Sep 2012 Web Sharma Bhasha Shukla Mapping culture through A River Sutra Tribal Myths Dialogism and Meta narratives in postcolonial Fiction Universal Journal of educational and general studies 1 2 February 2012 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Narmada River Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Narmada River amp oldid 1148682769, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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