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Kangsabati River

River in West Bengal, India

Kangsabati River

Summary

River in West Bengal, India

FieldValue
nameKangsabati River
name_otherCossye
imageKangsabati-River.jpg
image_captionKangsabati River near Midnapore City
mapDamodar Map.jpg
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1India
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2West Bengal
subdivision_type5Cities
subdivision_name5Purulia, Bankura, Midnapore, Kharagpur
length465.23 km
discharge1_locationHaldia
source1_locationJabor Pahar, Purulia district, Chota Nagpur Plateau, West Bengal
tributaries_rightKumari River

Kangsabati River (Pron:) (also variously known as the Kãsai and Cossye) rises from the Chota Nagpur plateau in the state of West Bengal, India and passes through the districts of Purulia, Bankura, Jhargram, Paschim Medinipur and Purba Medinipur in West Bengal before draining in the Bay of Bengal.

Course

The river flowing besides Deulghata in Purulia district

The river's headwaters are on the Chota Nagpur Plateau in Purulia district, near the city of Jhalda, where the smaller rivers Saharjhor and Girgiri join together. From there, it passes through Bankura district, passing the towns of Purulia, Khatra and Ranibandh. At Binpur it is joined by the Bhairabbanki, and at Keshpur the river splits into two.

The northern branch flows through the Daspur area, where it is known as the Palashpai Canal. This branch eventually flows into the Rupnarayan River. The other branch, still called the Kangsabati, flows in a south-easterly direction. Eventually, it meets the Keleghai River, and the junction of the two forms the Haldi River, which flows into the Bay of Bengal at Haldia.

Kangsabati Project

Kangsavati Reservoir, West Bengal, India

In 1956, the Indian government launched the Kangsabati Irrigation Project (also called the Kangsabati Reservoir Project) to provide water for the irrigation of Bankura, Hooghly, and Midnapore districts (the last now partitioned into Paschim Medinipur and Purba Medinipur districts). To facilitate this, Mukutmanipur Dam was constructed at the border of Purulia and Bankura districts near Mukutmanipur, creating a large reservoir. It is an earthen gravity dam with a concrete saddle spillway, standing 38 m high and 10098 m long with a gross storage capacity of 1.04 cubic kms (36.73 tmcft). Prior to this project, an anicut dam built on the Kangsabati River near Midnapore in 1784 was the sole irrigational structure on the river. , the dam provided water to just under 3500 km2 of land.

References

References

  1. Bandopadhyay, Dilip Kumar, ''Bharater Nodi'', p.68, Bharati Book Stall, 93 Mahatma Gandhi Road, Kolkata 700 997
  2. "Irrigation & Waterways Dept – Irrigation Sector – Major Irrigation Projects – Kangasbati".
  3. "Irrigation & Waterways Department".
  4. (1959). "Flood Control Journal". United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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