KOSI FAN, INDIA AND NEPAL
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| Plate F-19 |
Map |
The Ganges River plain drains the Himalaya Mountains
immediately to the north of this Landsat scene. Belka Hill is
a part of the Siwalik Hills, which mark the southern margin
of the Himalaya Range. These hills are generally 1000 to
1300 m above sea level and consist of dissected Miocene and
Pliocene continental fluvial sediments deposited as the
Himalayas formed by the continental collision of the Indian
subcontinent into Asia.
The northern quarter of this scene is in Nepal and
shows the emergence of the Kosi River from the
mountainous extreme eastern end of that nation. The
drainage basin includes the highest portion of the
Himalayas, with many peaks rising 6000 to 8000 m
above sea level. Mount Everest, the highest point on
Earth at 8848 m, is within the source basin. Annual
precipitation in the source area ranges from 130 to 165
cm/yr. However, 80 to 95 percent of this precipitation
occurs during the summer monsoon (June to September).
Monsoons are tropical weather phenomena involving
reversals of the prevailing wind directions between winter
and summer. The reversals arise from a latitudinal migration
of wind belts with the season. The winter monsoon of the
eastern Ganges plain is a dry subsiding air current directed
from the northeast. The Himalayas shield India from the
cold continental air of inland Asia north of the Tibetan plateau.
In summer, a deep trough develops over northern India, and
a southwesterly flow of warm wet air from the Indian Ocean
produces the summer monsoon. The warm wet air generates
maximum precipitation under the orographic influence of the
Himalayas. The resulting summer floods can cause the Kosi
River to attain a width of over 30 km on the nearly flat Ganges
plain. During the flood of 1968, the Kosi River achieved a
maximum discharge of 25840 m3/s (about 900000 cfs). This
flow from a catchment area of 59540 km2 is comparable to a
moderate flood on the Mississippi River, which drains
3270000 km2.
The Kosi River emerges from the Siwalik Hills
near the town of Chatra, where old fan surfaces and
adjacent hills have a savanna forest cover
(Figure F-19.1).
The channel pattern near Chatra is braided, and the
sediment load is dominated by boulders transported
during wet-season flooding
(Figure F-19.2). The Landsat scene shows dry-
season conditions, with the low flows visible as black
and the braided wet-season channels as bright
patterns immediately to the west. A dam is located
downstream of Chatra, and a diversion canal is clearly
visible extending eastward from the river barrier. Near
Saharsa (Figure F-19.3),
the sediment load is predominantly sand, and the pattern
is anastomosed with fine-grained sediment banks.
Farther downstream, the pattern becomes meandering as
sediment size is reduced and gradient decreases.
The Kosi Fan, outlined by the dashed lines on
the index map, covers an area of approximately
15000 km2 (Gole and Chitale, 1966). The fan has
an extremely low gradient. The slope at its apex,
near Chatra, is 1 m/km, and this decreases
distally to less than 0.2 m/km near the Ganges
River. The paleochannels at the fan apex have diffuse
patterns that indicate probable braiding when they flowed.
Near the fan toe, the abandoned paleochannels are meandering.
High-water-table conditions and local (non-
Himalayan) rainfall result in some continuous flow in these
channels. Some sandy point bars are present, but most of
the sediment is suspended clay.
Between 1736 and 1964, the Kosi River shifted 110 km
from east to west, reworking all the land in between (Gole
and Chitale, 1966). Unlike arid-region alluvial fans,
which show somewhat random shifts of erosion and deposition,
the Kosi Fan developed by a progressively shifting channel.
The shifting occurred as deposition raised the active portions
of the fan and the river moved to lower terrain on the inactive
portions. Because this process is now occurring on the extreme
western end of the fan, there is a strong possibility that migration
will now begin toward the east. A major shift to the east by
avulsion would also be possible, were it not for massive artificial
levees constructed to stabilize the river in its present position.
Braiding in the active western channel of the Kosi extends
much farther down the fan than the braiding in the paleochannels
to the east. It is probable that extensive deforestation of the
headwaters in recent decades (Figure F-19.1) resulted in increased
coarse sediment loads to the river. Water diversions may have also
contributed to the increased braiding of the modern Kosi River.
Landsat 2751-03455-7, February 11, 1977.
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