Graduate Level intermediate Drainage Patterns Watersheds River Basins Indian Geography
Drainage Patterns, Watersheds, and River Basins of India
Study notes on drainage patterns (dendritic, trellis, radial), watersheds, major drainage basins, and water divides for Kerala PSC graduate-level exams.
Study notes on drainage patterns (dendritic, trellis, radial), watersheds, major drainage basins, and water divides for Kerala PSC graduate-level exams.
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Drainage patterns and river basins are regularly tested in Kerala PSC geography sections. Understanding how rivers flow and how drainage systems form helps answer 2-3 questions per exam.
Key Terminology
Term
Meaning
Drainage
The river system of an area
Drainage pattern
The geometric arrangement of streams in a region
Drainage basin
Total area drained by a river and its tributaries (also called catchment area)
Watershed
The boundary line separating one drainage basin from another (also called water divide)
Tributary
A smaller stream that flows into a larger river
Distributary
A branch that flows away from the main river (common in deltas)
Confluence
Point where two rivers meet
Divide
Higher ground that separates two drainage basins
Types of Drainage Patterns
Pattern
Shape
Formed When
Example
Dendritic
Tree-branch like
Uniform rock; gentle slope; no structural control
Ganga and its tributaries in the Indo-Gangetic plain
Trellis
Rectangular grid; tributaries join at right angles
Folded mountains with alternating hard and soft rock
Streams in the Appalachian Mountains; parts of Singrauli coalfield
Radial
Streams flow outward from a central high point like spokes
Dome or volcanic cone
Rivers originating from Amarkantak (Narmada, Son, Mahanadi)
Rectangular
Right-angle bends in streams
Jointed/faulted rock with intersecting fractures
Streams in the Vindhyan region
Centripetal
Streams flow toward a central depression
Crater, caldera, or enclosed basin
Streams flowing into Loktak Lake (Manipur)
Annular
Ring-like pattern
Dome with alternating bands of hard and soft rock
Some tributaries around Pithoragarh (Uttarakhand)
Parallel
Streams flow nearly parallel to each other
Steep uniform slopes
Rivers of the Western Ghats flowing westward into the Arabian Sea
Deranged
Irregular, no clear pattern
Glaciated regions with disrupted drainage
Parts of Canadian Shield
Barbed
Tributaries flow in opposite direction to the main stream
River capture (piracy)
Some tributaries in the Himalayas
India’s Drainage Systems — Two Major Divisions
Feature
Himalayan Rivers
Peninsular Rivers
Origin
Glaciers in the Himalayas
Western Ghats, Central Highlands
Nature
Perennial (snow-fed + rain-fed)
Mostly seasonal (rain-fed)
Age
Young, still cutting their valleys
Old, reached maturity
Valleys
Deep, V-shaped gorges
Broad, shallow valleys
Meanders
Large meanders in plains
Smaller meanders
Deltas
Large deltas (Ganga, Brahmaputra)
Both deltas and estuaries
Drainage pattern
Mostly antecedent (older than the mountains)
Mostly consequent
Examples
Ganga, Yamuna, Brahmaputra
Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri, Narmada
Major Drainage Basins of India
India has 25 major river basins as classified by the Central Water Commission.
Watershed management is key to achieving water security in rainfed areas
Drainage Patterns of Specific Indian Regions
Region
Drainage Pattern
Reason
Indo-Gangetic Plain
Dendritic
Uniform alluvial deposits, gentle slope
Amarkantak Plateau
Radial
Dome-shaped uplift; Narmada, Son, Johilla originate here
Western Ghats (west-flowing)
Parallel
Steep western slope, short distance to sea
Shillong Plateau
Radial
Dome-shaped plateau
Deccan Plateau (eastern slope)
Dendritic to sub-dendritic
Relatively uniform basaltic rock
PSC Quick Recall
Question
Answer
Tree-branch drainage pattern
Dendritic
Rivers flowing outward from a central peak
Radial pattern
Largest river basin in India
Ganga basin
Narmada and Tapi form __ not deltas
Estuaries
Western Ghats act as a
Water divide between Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea rivers
Percentage of India draining into Bay of Bengal
About 77%
Streams joining main river at right angles
Trellis pattern
Amarkantak shows which drainage pattern?
Radial
What is a watershed?
Boundary line between two drainage basins
Peninsular rivers are mostly
Seasonal (rain-fed)
Drainage patterns and river basins are regularly tested in Kerala PSC geography sections. Understanding how rivers flow and how drainage systems form helps answer 2-3 questions per exam.
Key Terminology
Term
Meaning
Drainage
The river system of an area
Drainage pattern
The geometric arrangement of streams in a region
Drainage basin
Total area drained by a river and its tributaries (also called catchment area)
Watershed
The boundary line separating one drainage basin from another (also called water divide)
Tributary
A smaller stream that flows into a larger river
Distributary
A branch that flows away from the main river (common in deltas)
Confluence
Point where two rivers meet
Divide
Higher ground that separates two drainage basins
Types of Drainage Patterns
Pattern
Shape
Formed When
Example
Dendritic
Tree-branch like
Uniform rock; gentle slope; no structural control
Ganga and its tributaries in the Indo-Gangetic plain
Trellis
Rectangular grid; tributaries join at right angles
Folded mountains with alternating hard and soft rock
Streams in the Appalachian Mountains; parts of Singrauli coalfield
Radial
Streams flow outward from a central high point like spokes
Dome or volcanic cone
Rivers originating from Amarkantak (Narmada, Son, Mahanadi)
Rectangular
Right-angle bends in streams
Jointed/faulted rock with intersecting fractures
Streams in the Vindhyan region
Centripetal
Streams flow toward a central depression
Crater, caldera, or enclosed basin
Streams flowing into Loktak Lake (Manipur)
Annular
Ring-like pattern
Dome with alternating bands of hard and soft rock
Some tributaries around Pithoragarh (Uttarakhand)
Parallel
Streams flow nearly parallel to each other
Steep uniform slopes
Rivers of the Western Ghats flowing westward into the Arabian Sea
Deranged
Irregular, no clear pattern
Glaciated regions with disrupted drainage
Parts of Canadian Shield
Barbed
Tributaries flow in opposite direction to the main stream
River capture (piracy)
Some tributaries in the Himalayas
India’s Drainage Systems — Two Major Divisions
Feature
Himalayan Rivers
Peninsular Rivers
Origin
Glaciers in the Himalayas
Western Ghats, Central Highlands
Nature
Perennial (snow-fed + rain-fed)
Mostly seasonal (rain-fed)
Age
Young, still cutting their valleys
Old, reached maturity
Valleys
Deep, V-shaped gorges
Broad, shallow valleys
Meanders
Large meanders in plains
Smaller meanders
Deltas
Large deltas (Ganga, Brahmaputra)
Both deltas and estuaries
Drainage pattern
Mostly antecedent (older than the mountains)
Mostly consequent
Examples
Ganga, Yamuna, Brahmaputra
Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri, Narmada
Major Drainage Basins of India
India has 25 major river basins as classified by the Central Water Commission.