Dwarkeswar River River in West Bengal/poribesh o banglar Nodi/Rupnarayan River/পরিবেশ ও বাংলার নদী।
Автор: পরিবেশ ও বাংলারনদী
Загружено: 2025-04-05
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Dwarkeswar is an important river in West Bengal. Currently, the river is disappearing. The entire river has dried up at the beginning of Greece. Dwarkeswar or Dhalkishore or Dhalkishore is one of the main rivers of southwestern West Bengal. It flows through the districts of Purulia, Bankura, Hooghly and West Midnapore. The Dwarkeswar river originates from a lake located between Ardra town and Hura village of Kashipur police station in Purulia district and flows eastwards. At some distance, two rivers named Rok and Dudhbharia join this river. The Kumasi river joins the Dwarkeswar near Chatna in Bankura district. The river drainage system of Bengal is a little more complex in the case of South Bengal, especially in the case of Medinipur, Howrah and Hooghly districts. Together, the three major rivers Damodar, Darkeshwar and Shilavati and their tributaries and tributaries are almost completely drained through the drainage of the Mundeshwari-Rupnarayan rivers. In this region, the river does not have a natural slope, the course of the rivers has changed many times, currently there are tributaries along the main course of these three rivers, as well as several old river channels (nicknamed Kana River). The Damodar has changed its course so many times that there are several river channels named Kana and Damodar. With a huge flow of water from Jharkhand, the Gandheshwari River joins the Dwarkeswar at Pratappur near the city of Bankura in four districts of Bengal (two Burdwan, Purulia and Bankura). The other four tributaries of Dwarkeswar in this district are - Birai, Arkusha, Horingmuri and Cholakandar. Then it flows southeast and enters Hooghly district at Kumarganj in Arambagh subdivision. Near Ghatal in Paschim Medinipur district, it joins the Shilai river and flows as Dwarkeswar Rupnarayan. The two rivers Shilavati and Darkeshwar join near the port, from there it flows southwards), the two streams on the left and right join at Baksi Ghat and take the name Rupnarayan, and through Kolaghat it joins the Hooghly river at Geokhali. Rupnarayan is the only drainage medium for the heavy rain water of the six districts of Bengal and the water of the Damodar coming from Jharkhand.

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