The most significant
feature of the Bangladesh
landscape is provided by the rivers, which have molded not only its
physiography but also the way of life of the people. Rivers in Bangladesh, however, are subject to constant and
sometimes rapid changes of course, which can affect the hydrology of a large
region; consequently, no description of Bangladesh’s topography retains its
absolute accuracy for long. One spectacular example of such a change occurred
in 1787, when the Tista River
underwent exceptionally high flooding; its waters were suddenly diverted
eastward, where they reinforced the Brahmaputra.
The swollen Brahmaputra in turn began to cut
into a minor stream, which by the early 1800s had become the river’s main lower
course, now known as the Jamuna. A much smaller river (the Old Brahmaputra) now
flows through the Brahmaputra’s former course.
Each year between June and October, the rivers overflow their banks and
inundate the countryside, rising most heavily in September or October and
receding quickly in November. The inundations are both a blessing and a curse.
Without them, the fertile silt deposits would not be replenished, but severe
floods regularly damage crops and ruin hamlets and sometimes take a heavy toll
on human and animal populations.
The rivers may be divided into five systems: (1) The Padma
(or Ganges)
and its deltaic streams, (2) the Meghna
and the Surma
river system, (3) the Jamuna and its adjoining channels, (4) the North Bengal
rivers, and (5) the rivers of the Chittagong Hill Tracts and the adjoining
plains.
The greater Ganges is the pivot of the deltaic river system of the
historical region of Bengal. The
greater Ganges Delta covers some 23,000 square miles (60,000 square km), the
bulk of it in southwestern Bangladesh.
The Ganges in Bangladesh
is known as the Padma, and it is divided into two segments, the upper Padma and
the lower Padma.
The river enters Bangladesh
from the west and constitutes, for about 90 miles (145 km), the boundary
between Bangladesh and West Bengal. As it flows farther into Bangladesh, the
upper Padma forms numerous distributaries and spill channels and reaches its
confluence with the Jamuna west of Dhaka, after
which their combined waters make up the lower Padma—which, from a hydrological
perspective, is the Padma proper. The lower Padma flows southeast to join the
Meghna near Chandpur
and enters the Bay of
Bengal through the Meghna estuary and lesser channels. Except where it is
confined by high banks, the upper Padma’s main channel changes course every two
or three years. Its waters appear muddy owing to the volume of silt carried by
the river. Silt deposits build temporary islands that reduce navigability but
are so highly fertile that they have been for decades a source of feuds among
peasants who rush to occupy them.
The Meghna
is formed by the union of the Sylhet-Surma and Kusiyara rivers. These two
rivers are branches of the Barak River,
which rises in the Nagar-Manipur watershed in India. The main branch of the
Barak, the Surma, is joined near Azmiriganj in northeastern Bangladesh by
the Kalni and farther down by the Kusiyara branch. The Dhaleswari,
a distributary of the Jamuna
River, joins the Meghna a
few miles above the junction of the lower Padma and the Meghna. As it meanders
south, the Meghna grows larger after receiving the waters of several rivers,
including the Buriganga and the Sitalakhya.
The Jamuna and its adjoining channels cover a large area from north-central Bangladesh to the Meghna River
in the southeast. A number of rivers enter the Jamuna, especially from the
west, and, with their notoriously shifting channels, they not only prevent
permanent settlement along the Jamuna’s banks but also inhibit communication
between the northern area of Bangladesh
and the eastern part, where Dhaka is situated.
The Tista
is the most important water carrier of northwestern Bangladesh. Rising in the Himalayas
near Sikkim,
India, it flows southward,
turning southeast near Darjiling
(Darjeeling) to enter Bangladesh, where it eventually
meets the Jamuna. The shoals and quicksand that surround the junction of the
two rivers render navigation of the Tista’s lower reaches difficult.
Four main rivers constitute the river system of the Chittagong Hills and the
adjoining plains—the Feni, the Karnaphuli, the Sangu, and the Matamuhari.
Flowing generally west and southwest across the coastal plain, they empty into
the Bay of Bengal. Of these rivers the longest
is the Karnaphuli,
which is dammed at Kaptai, about 30 miles (50 km) upstream from its mouth near
the city of Chittagong.
None of the major rivers of Bangladesh
originates within the country’s territory. The headwaters of the Surma are in India; the
upper Padma rises in Nepal and the
Jamuna in China,
but they too reach Bangladesh
across Indian territory. Thus, Bangladesh
lacks full control over the flow of any of the streams that irrigate it. The
construction of a barrage upstream at Farakka in West Bengal has led to the
diversion of a considerable volume of water from the Ganges in India, and the flow to western Bangladesh is
insufficient in the dry season, from November to April. The equitable
distribution of the river’s waters has been since the 1970s a source of
friction between India and Bangladesh.
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