Misplaced Pages

Pravara River

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

River in Maharashtra, India
Pravara
Umbrella falls on Pravara river
Location
CountryIndia
StateMaharashtra
DistrictAhmednagar
CitiesSangamner, Nevasa
Physical characteristics
SourceSahayadris
 • locationAhmednagar, Nahik Subdivision, Maharashtra, India
 • coordinates19°31′45″N 73°45′5″E / 19.52917°N 73.75139°E / 19.52917; 73.75139
 • elevation750 m (2,460 ft)
MouthGodavari River
 • locationPravara Sangam, Ahmednagar, Nahik Subdivision, Maharashtra, India
 • coordinates19°37′00″N 75°01′00″E / 19.61667°N 75.01667°E / 19.61667; 75.01667
 • elevation531 m (1,742 ft)
Length208 km (129 mi)
Basin size6,537 km (2,524 sq mi)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftWaki, Mahalungi
 • rightMula

The Pravara is the smallest of the major tributaries of Godavari river located in Maharashtra, India. Among the 7 major tributaries, it is the only tributary which originates in the Western Ghats akin to Godavari. Also, it is the only major tributary of Godavari to have both its source and confluence located within the same district - Ahmednagar.

Etymology

As per Indian Vedas, Sage Agastya meditated by consuming only water and air for a long tenure. Due to his incredible devotion, Lord Shiva appeared, blessed him, and left a stream of Ganga that came to be known as the Pravara River.

Origin

The Pravara rises on the eastern slopes of the Sahayadris between Kulang and Ratangad mountains in the Ahmednagar District of Maharashtra.

Course

Close to its origin the river flows into the town of Bhandardara. Here, the Bhandardara Dam is constructed across the river forming the Arthur Lake. The gates of the dam are periodically opened, to allow drownstream flow of the Pravara, giving rise to the Umbrella Falls. From hereon the river takes an east ward course and 58 km downstream, reaches another city- Sangamner, where the river Mahalungi converges with it. This is the second largest city within the Ahmednagar District. Continuing eastwards, the river is joined by another tributary, this time on its right bank: River Mula. The river then, reaches the town of Nevasa and flows 12 km to the east where it finally empties itself into the Godavari River at Pravara Sangam located 208 km (129 mi) from its source of origin.

Tributaries

In its short run, the river acquires water from two main tributaries : Mahalungi and Mula.

  • Mahalungi : It rises on the southern and eastern slopes of Patta and Aundha. After the course of three miles (4.8 km), it passes east into the Sinnar taluka of Nashik. It reenters Ahmednagar, after taking a bend towards south, it ends at Sangamner, where it converges with Pravara at its left-bank.
  • Mula : This river rises on the eastern slopes of the Sahayadris between Ratangad and Harichandragad. For the first twenty miles, it flows parallel to Pravara, draining the southernmost or Kotul valley of Akole taluka. Passing the town of Kotul it takes a bend to Baleshvar. It then crosses through Sangamner, Parner. The Dam Mula is constructed across the river at Baragaon Nandur. The river drains into Pravara just before the town Nevasa.
  • Adhala : It originates in north of Akole on the Slopes of Patta and Mahakali. Merges with the Pravara 3 km (2 miles) west of Sangamner.

Dams

References

  1. "Did You Know - Anandvan Resort - Bhandardara".
  2. "Geography of Ahmednagar District". Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  3. Cyrille Korsakoff, Tina Kuo Shi Wen. "PRAVARA SANGAM MAHARASHTRA INDIA Geography Population Map cities coordinates location - Tageo.com". www.tageo.com.
Godavari basin
Rivers
Major tributaries
Minor tributaries
Sub-tributaries






Dams, barrages
Geographical
features / regions
Riparian districts
Maharashtra
Madhya Pradesh
Odisha
Chhattisgarh
Karnataka
Telangana
Andhra Pradesh
Cities
Languages / people
Coalfields
Oil / gas fields
Industries
Transport
Highways and railways
Bridges on Godavari
Pollution concerns,
river basin's sustainable
productivity & ecology
  • Algal bloom in reservoirs
  • High alkalinity of river water in the river basin upstream of Pochampadu dam
  • Frequent floods in tail end area of the river basin
  • Alkali salts / high pH water run off from ash / red mud dumps of coal fired power stations / bauxite ore enrichment
  • Excessive silting of reservoirs due to deforestation and mining activities
Related topics
Other basins
Hydrography of Maharashtra
Rivers
Waterfalls
Lakes
Dams
Categories: