Jamuna River (Bangladesh)

A Map showing major rivers in Bangladesh including Jamuna.
Fishing boats on the Jamuna River

The Jamuna River (Bengali: যমুনা, romanizedyamunā Jomuna) is one of the three main rivers of Bangladesh. It is the lower stream of the Brahmaputra River, which originates in Tibet as Yarlung Tsangpo, before flowing through India and then southwest into Bangladesh. The Jamuna flows south and joins the Padma River (Pôdda), near Goalundo Ghat, before meeting the Meghna River near Chandpur. It then flows into the Bay of Bengal as the Meghna River.

The Brahmaputra-Jamuna is a classic example of a braided river and is highly susceptible to channel migration and avulsion.[1] It is characterised by a network of interlacing channels with numerous sandbars enclosed between them. The sandbars, known in Bengali as chars, do not occupy a permanent position. The river deposits them in one year, very often to be destroyed later, and redeposits them in the next rainy season. The process of bank and deposit erosion together with redeposition has been going on continuously,[2] making it difficult to precisely demarcate the boundary between the districts of Sirajganj and Pabna on one side and the districts of Mymensingh, Tangail and Dhaka on the other. The breaking of a char or the emergence of a new one is also a cause of much violence and litigation. The confluence of the Jamuna and the Padma rivers is unusually unstable and has been shown to have migrated southeast by over fourteen kilometres between 1972 and 2014.[3]

Jamuna River
  1. ^ Catling, David (1982). Rice in deep water. International Rice Research Institute. p. 177. ISBN 978-971-22-0005-2. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  2. ^ Mount, Nick J.; Tate, Nicholas J.; Sarker, Maminul H.; Thorne, Colin R. (2013). "Evolutionary, multi-scale analysis of river bank line retreat using continuous wavelet transforms: Jamuna River, Bangladesh" (PDF). Geomorphology. 183: 82–95. Bibcode:2013Geomo.183...82M. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2012.07.017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2018. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
  3. ^ Dixon, Simon J.; Smith, Gregory H. Sambrook; Best, James L.; Nicholas, Andrew P.; Bull, Jon M.; Vardy, Mark E.; Sarker, Maminul H.; Goodbred, Steven (2018). "The planform mobility of river channel confluences: Insights from analysis of remotely sensed imagery". Earth-Science Reviews. 176: 1–18. Bibcode:2018ESRv..176....1D. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2017.09.009. hdl:10871/30566.

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