| Specifications |
| Publisher: Aayu Publications, New Delhi | |
| Author Archana Datta | |
| Language: English | |
| Pages: 95 | |
| Cover: HARDCOVER | |
| 10.0x7.5 Inch | |
| Weight 380 gm | |
| Edition: 2022 | |
| ISBN: 9789391685065 | |
| HBT762 |
| Delivery and Return Policies |
| Usually ships in 5 days | |
| Returns and Exchanges accepted within 7 days | |
| Free Delivery |
Alluvial tracts of Bengal Delta are a subject of research
for the past few decades. Bagchi (1944) has classified the Ganges Delta region
into three sections, vix, moribund, mature and active parts of the delta. In
the Moribund delta, rivers have ceased to be in the active stage and land
building has been arrested. Here tributaries are highly silted and are marked
by abundance of oxbow lakes. The Geographical extent of this Moribund delta
covers the districts of Murshidabad (eastern part of the Bhagirathi river
only), part of Nadia and 24 Parganas in West Bengal and Jessore, western part
of Faridpur (Goalando subdivision) and small portion in the north of Khulna in
Bangladesh. The study area is in Murshidabad district of West Bengal. The
Moribund delta region, the oldest part of the delta, has been formed by silt
from shifting of the Main River and major distributaries. The slope of the
moribund zone is very gentle, causing quick silt deposition in river beds. This
process decrense carrying capacity of the river channels and induces occasional
floods. It also causes a gradual or sudden shifting of river channels to a more
low lying area. Thus, the Moribund delta is being marked by dead and dying
rivers characterised by contrasting levels, i.e. very high river beds and banks
and low marshy or water logged land. According to Singh (1971) the easterly
shift of the Ganges is also responsible for this moribund condition of the
region. The Padma, the main course of the Ganga at present, is the principal
river of the region as well as in Murshidabad district and total drainage
system of the area is controlled by the oscillation and changing course of the
Ganga from the Bhagirathi to the Padma. Shifting of the Ganga from the
Bhagirathi to the present course the Padma through the subsequent channels
viz., the Bhairab, the Jalangi, etc., has been probably completed by the 16th
century. Majumder (1942) admits the difficulties to determine when the great
change took place, but there is hardly any doubt that in the beginning of the
16th century A.D., the Padma, already has ranked as the main stream of the
Ganga. From the very existence of the river Chhoto Bhairab, some concentric
water bodies and numerous crescent shape settlements in the western part of the
Bhairab, Rizvi (1958) has come to the opinion that the Bhairab has marched
gradually castward abandoning its course. Existence of numerous natural levees
at Bhagwangola, Murshidabad and Jiaganj also establishes the gradual onstward
shifting of the Padma and its distributaries. The name of the agricultural land
as "la bhangar jami (la means boat) in the studied village-Sahajadpur may
be mentioned as a proof of the statement. People say that many years ago
remnants of boats have been found during digging of soil. Again from the O'
Malley's District Gazetteer (1914) it is known that the Bhairab used to take
off from the Padma close to the point where the Mahananda used to flow into it.
It had been suggested that it originally formed a continuation of the
Mahananda, which cut in half by the Padma as it established its way eastwards.
It has been observed from O'Maley (1914) that the Bhairab was the main channel
through which the Jalangi used to obtain its supply from the Padma. Various
hypotheses were in vogue to identify the causes behind this changing nature of
the courses of the rivers. Some said that the platform for this fluvial action
was set through tectonic activities. Morgan and Intire (1959) assessed the
changes in the course of the Ganga and the Brahmaputra rivers during the last
few hundred years due to faulting and resultant tilting of fault blocks. These
changes had caused the Ganga to abandon numerous western distributaries in
favour of joining the Brahmaputra Meghna system to the southeast. Mukherjee
(1938) referred that it was probably deflection of the Kosi, which was an
easterly flowing river to the west in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries
and strengthened the channel of the Padma. Formerly, the combined water of the
Kosi, the Mahananda and the Atrai flowed into the Lohitya. Tremendous changes
took place in the course of those and other Himalayan rivers which might have
been due to silting up of the drainage basin along the Himalayas by the debris
from the hill slope and sudden seismic disturbances and those rivers began to
flow into the Ganges. Thus, this change became responsible for the mighty force
of the Padma. Sengupta (1972) said that the shift of the present rivers of West
Bengal appeared to be the outcome of two distinct features: (i) a regional
south-easterly slope of the basin, caused to some extent by movements on the
hinge zones located at the edge of the shelf and (ii) an increasing rate of
southerly tilt of the West Bengal part of the basin due to a relatively greater
rate of subsidence of the south western part of the hinge through the tertiary
and recent times. Mukherjee (1938) referred that most of the eastern part of
Murshidabad district was originally an estuary.
The increasing erosion in the right bank of the Padma in the
Moribund delta region of Murshidabad district, West Bengal is becoming the
nightmare for the people of the area. The Padma is the principal river of the
region and controls total drainage system of the area by oscillation and change
of its course. As the Padma is a meandering river, bank erosion followed by
flood is the common phenomenon. But indiscriminate drawal of water in the upper
reaches of the Ganga, deforestation and most importantly construction of
Farakka Barrage has aggravated the dimension of river bank erosion. Areas near
the Padma have seriously been affected by the changing course of the mother
river or its distributaries. In the present treaties author has tried to focus
and highlight through empirical data that the study area according to intensity
of erosion has been divided. Thousands of hectares of land and many settlements
have already been obliterated making the settlers pauper. It has been reflected
in variation of landholding size and change in the status of land owning gentry
which in chain lead to affect households as well as occupation structure in
those regions. The study has shown that changing course of the Padma is also
responsible for changing occupation pattern, population and settlement pattern
also. Region wise variation has also been observed in land use pattern and
agricultural land use. The lowest diversification of crops in the Most affected
region proves the most agricultural uncertainty of the area. Differences have
been found in loss and availability of infrastructure facilities for irrigation
and use of agricultural implements. Thus, changing course of the river has
caused various changes which brings not only a nightmare to the habitat but it
also has affected subsistence pattern which is full of agony with the mercy of
celestial world throughout the region. With this empirical study it has also
been highlighted people's perceptions and government efforts found in this
region to minimise this hazard. The planners, NGOs and social activists can
easily formulate any development scheme on the basis of first hand information
documented through empiricist by researcher-Geographer and accordingly a
fruitful programme may be executed where the author has also put some
suggestions to mitigate the problems arised from this natural phenomenon.
Dr. (Mrs) Archana Datta is M.A., Ph.D in Geography from the
University of Calcutta. She has carried out extensive field work as a research
personnel of Anthropological Survey of India in West Bengal, Bihar and Sikkim.
Her special interest is to observe process of human adaptation to cultural
landscape in different ecosystems. She has authored five books entitled (1)
Changing Patterns of Land Use Among The Baigas of Madhya Pradesh, (2) India -
An Illustration of Tribal World, (3) India - An Illustrated Atlas of Scheduled
Castes, (4) Development of tourism in Sikkim, (5) The Wonderland - Alaska. In
addition she has more than 40 research papers.
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