India's peninsular rivers, like the Godavari, Krishna, and Kaveri are perennial. That means they flow through the year. They get the water by monsoon rains and also get water from reservoirs and dams. The Western Ghats gets a lot of rain during the monsoon and that is how these rivers keep flowing.Read more
India’s peninsular rivers, like the Godavari, Krishna, and Kaveri are perennial. That means they flow through the year. They get the water by monsoon rains and also get water from reservoirs and dams. The Western Ghats gets a lot of rain during the monsoon and that is how these rivers keep flowing.
On the other hand, most of India’s northern rivers on the Indo-Gangetic Plains like the Ganga and Yamuna are perennial as they depend heavily on rainwater as well as melting snow from the Himalayas. In summers, their flow reduces too much.
The socio-economic impact of these differences is huge. The perennial rivers in the northern region provide water throughout the year for agriculture, drinking and industrial needs. Since the availability is assured, crops are planned around the year. This ensures food security and sustains millions of livelihoods.
Seasonal rivers in the Indo-Gangetic Plains, however, pose both. During the dry season, these rivers can suffer from water scarcity affecting agriculture and crop production leading to farmers’ economic stress. On the other hand, during monsoon season, these rivers become flood prone and cause damage to crops, houses and physical infrastructure which requires to be managed through the construction of dams and irrigation systems for efficient storage and distribution.
Perennial rivers tend to have more stability and economic value, while seasonal rivers need more management to reduce the risks of water shortage and flood.
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Folk’s classification of limestones is one of the most commonly used methods of limestone categorization that was introduced by Robert L. Folk and it categorizes limestones based on their composition and texture. This classification is useful when tracing the depositional environments and geologicalRead more
Folk’s classification of limestones is one of the most commonly used methods of limestone categorization that was introduced by Robert L. Folk and it categorizes limestones based on their composition and texture. This classification is useful when tracing the depositional environments and geological history of limestones.
Folk’s system divides limestones into three main components:
1. Allochems: These are the grains or particles mostly observed in the formation of limestone. They include:
Skeletal grains (bioclasts): Some of the smaller shells, corals, and other organisms recognized in the marine ecosystem.
Ooids: Shapes that are shell-like with concentric circles ranging from inside out.
Pellets: Small, spherical dust, likely to be generated by any of the above-mentioned organisms.
Intraclasts: Limestone chips of a small size or irregular shapes and some of the pieces are split.
2. Matrix: This is a very micro-grain size of the sedimentation material which is made up of infants of calcite in microcrystalline nature known as the micrite that encases the allochems.
3. Cement: The chemical part which is mainly sparite (sparry calcite) formed by the groundwater, cements both the allochems and matrix.
Folk subdivided limestones into classificational types with regard to the kind of the most ubiquitous allochems and matrix or cement. For example:
Oosparite: Limestone with mainly ooids and with sparry calcite cement.
Biomicrite: Limestone that is created mainly from the skeletal part of the micrite mud.
Pelmicrite: Mudstone with lime pellets in the sub-micritic fabric.
This system provides much information on the depositional environments of the limestones and their diagenetic evolution and as such assists the geologists.
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