List of rivers of Pakistan

Major rivers and lakes of Pakistan

''This is information about rivers in Pakistan if you would like to know well then get reading''!

Rivers of Punjab.

The Indus River is the lifeline of Pakistan. Without the Indus and its tributaries, the land would have turned into a barren desert long ago. The Indus originates in Tibet from the glacial streams of the Himalayas and is called Sengge Zangbo in Tibet. It enters Pakistan though Gilgit-Baltistan in the northeast. It runs generally southwestward the entire length of Pakistan, about 2,900 km (1,800 mi), and empties into the Arabian Sea. The Indus and its tributaries provide water to two-thirds of Pakistan. Most of the water of Indus comes from the ice melt of huge glaciers in Karakorum, Himalaya and other mounatain ranges in Gilgit-Baltistan and Kashmir. The principal tributaries of the Indus are the river Gilgit, Shigar, Shyok, Astore and Hunza in Gilgit-Baltistan, river Zanskar in Ladakh, Kabul in NWFP and Sutlej, Beas, Chenab, Ravi, and Jhelum rivers in Punjab. In southwestern Punjab Province these rivers merge to form the Panjnad (“Five Rivers”), which then merges with the Indus to form a mighty river. As the Indus approaches the Arabian Sea, it spreads out to form a delta. Much of the delta is marshy and swampy. It includes 225,000 hectares (556,000 acres) of mangrove forests and swamps. To the west of the delta is the seaport of Karāchi; to the east the delta fans into the salt marshes known as the Rann of Kutch.

This is a list of rivers wholly or partly in Pakistan, organised geographically by river basin, from west to east. Tributaries are listed from the mouth to the source.

The longest and the largest river in Pakistan is the Indus River. Around two-thirds of water supplied for irrigation and in homes come from the Indus and its associated rivers.[1]

Flowing into the Arabian Sea (flowing only in rainy season during smaller part of year may or may not reach sea)

Indus River Basin

Flowing into endorheic basins

Hamun-i-Mashkel

Sistan Basin

Indus Plains

Thar Desert

Tarim Basin

Ancient rivers

References

  1. Wildlife of Pakistan website
  2. Oldham, R. D. (1893). "The Saraswati and the Lost River of the Indian Desert". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society: 49–76.
  3. Agarwal, Vishal (2003). "A Reply to Michael Witzel's ‘Ein Fremdling im Rgveda’" (PDF). Journal of Indo-European Studies 31 (1–2): 107–185. It may be noted that the Nara is still called the Sarasvati by rural Sindhis and its dried up delta in Kutch is still regarded as that of Sarasvati by the locals.
  4. Mughal 1997

External links

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