- 20% of the world's population do not have access to safe drinking water.
- 40% do not have sufficient water for adequate living and hygiene.
- More than 2.2 million people die each year from diseases related to contaminated drinking water.
- Per capita availability of fresh water in India has dropped from 5,177 cubic meters in 1951 to 1,820 cubic meters in 2001.
- India with 16% of the world's population has only 4% of the fresh water resources.
- In many rural areas, women still have to walk a distance of about 2.5 kms to reach the source of
water. On an average, a rural woman walks more than 14000 km a year just to fetch water. - Water source being open dug well, the quality of water is poor; dirty, saline and has turbidity.
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About Me
- Chandrani the Dreams
- Hello..I am Dr. Pinki Purkayastha, Chandrani is my other name.I am an Environmental Scientist by profession...I love to write articles, poems, stories and dramas tooo.....
Monday, August 15, 2011
SOME FACTS RELATED TO WATER WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO INDIA
Friday, January 21, 2011
Friday, November 26, 2010
Are you aware of this marvel ?
Here is bit of information that u would love to know !
1000 years old...... Deepest step well in the world - Jaipur- India
.....still in immaculate condition....... this is engineering wonder..... without modern day....instruments....
Chand Baori - The Deepest Stepwell in the World!
Chand Baori is a famous stepwell situated in the village Abhaneri near Jaipur in Indian state of Rajasthan.
The Chand Baori, a vast well with flights of steps on three sides, is a 10th century monument situated in Abhaneri. It is a fine example of the architectural excellence prevalent in the past. This impressive step well is as deep as a seven storeyed building.
The famous Harshat Mata temple situated opposite to this well shows that there must have been a religious connection with the step-well. The well is 35 m on each side with steps leading down from each side and water can be drawn from any level. It has so many steps to make it impossible for someone to retrieve a coin once it ' s been dropped in the well.
Here is bit of information that u would love to know !
1000 years old...... Deepest step well in the world - Jaipur- India
.....still in immaculate condition....... this is engineering wonder..... without modern day....instruments....
Chand Baori - The Deepest Stepwell in the World!
Chand Baori is a famous stepwell situated in the village Abhaneri near Jaipur in Indian state of Rajasthan.
The Chand Baori, a vast well with flights of steps on three sides, is a 10th century monument situated in Abhaneri. It is a fine example of the architectural excellence prevalent in the past. This impressive step well is as deep as a seven storeyed building.
The famous Harshat Mata temple situated opposite to this well shows that there must have been a religious connection with the step-well. The well is 35 m on each side with steps leading down from each side and water can be drawn from any level. It has so many steps to make it impossible for someone to retrieve a coin once it ' s been dropped in the well.
Friday, September 17, 2010
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Friday, June 11, 2010
Traditional water harvesting methods in India : Pinki Purkasyastha (Chandrani)
water has been harvested in India since antiquity..our ancestors were expert in the art water harvsting .its is to be noted that,
- They harvested the rain drop directly. From rooftops, they collected water and stored it in tanks built in their courtyards. From open community lands, they collected the rain and stored it in artificial wells.
- They harvested monsoon runoff by capturing water from swollen streams during the monsoon season and stored it various forms of water bodies.
- They harvested water from flooded rivers...
Different water harvesting systems are generally known by different names in different areas of the country such as..
Eco-zone | Traditional water harvesting systems | Description | Found in |
1. Trans-Himalayan Region | Zing | Tanks for collecting water from melted ice | Ladakh |
2. Western Himalayas | Kul | Water channels in mountain areas | Jammu, Himachal Pradesh |
Naula | Small ponds | Uttaranchal | |
Kuhl | Headwall across a ravine to divert water from a natural stream for irrigation | Himachal Pradesh | |
Khatri | Chambers carved in hard rock for storing water | Himachal Pradesh | |
3. Eastern Himalayas | Apatani | Terraced plots connected by inlet and outlet channels | Arunachal Pradesh |
4. Northeastern Hill Ranges | Zabo | Impounding runoff | Nagaland |
Cheo-oziihi | Channels from rivers | Nagaland | |
Bamboo drip irrigation | Water from streams in the hills is brought to the plains via bamboo pipes for drip irrigation | Meghalaya | |
5. Brahmaputra Valley | Dongs | Ponds | Assam |
Dungs / jampois | Small irrigation canals linking rice fields and a stream | W. Bengal | |
6. Indo-Gangetic Plain | Ahar-pynes | Embanked catchment basin and channels | S. Bihar |
Bengal's inundation channels | Inundation canals | W. Bengal | |
Dighis | Small square or circular reservoir fed by canals from rivers | Delhi | |
Baolis | Stepwells | Delhi | |
7. Thar Desert | Kunds / kundis | Underground storage | W.Rajasthan |
Kuis / beris | Deep pits near tanks | W.Rajasthan | |
Baoris / bers | Community wells | Rajasthan | |
Jhalaras | Tank | Rajasthan, Gujarat | |
Nadi | Village ponds | Jodhpur, Rajasthan | |
Tankas | Underground tank | Bikaner, Rajasthan | |
Khadins | Embankment across lower hill slopes | Jaisalmer, W. Rajasthan | |
Vav / Vavdi / Baoli / Bavadi | Stepwells | Gujarat, Rajasthan | |
Virdas | Shallow wells | Rann of Kutch, Gujarat | |
Paar | Area where water has percolated, accessed by kuis | - | |
8. Central Highlands | Talab / Bandhis | Reservoirs | Bundelkhand, Madhya Pradesh |
Saza Kuva | Open well | Mewar, E. Rajasthan | |
Johads | Earthen check dams | Alwar district, Rajasthan | |
Naada / bandh | Stone check dam | Mewar, Thar desert | |
Pat | Diversion bund across stream | Jhabua district, Madhya Pradesh | |
Rapat | Percolation tank | Rajasthan | |
Chandela tank | Tank | Rajasthan | |
Bundela tank | Tank | Rajasthan | |
9. Eastern Highlands | Katas / Mundas / Bandhas | Earthen embankments across drainage lines | Orissa & Madhya Pradesh |
10. Deccan Plateau | Cheruvu | Reservoirs to store runoff | Chitoor,Cuddapah districts of Andhra Pradesh |
Kohli tanks | Tanks | Maharashtra | |
Bhandaras | Check dams | Maharashtra | |
Phad | Check dams and canals | North western Maharashtra | |
Kere | Series of tanks | Central Karnataka | |
Ramtek Model | Intricate network of groundwater and surface waterbodies, connected through surface and underground canals | Ramtek, Maharashtra | |
11. Western Ghats | Surangam | Horizontal well | Kasargode, Kerala |
12. Western Coastal Plains | Virdas | Shallow wells | Rann of Kutch, Gujarat |
13. Eastern Ghats | Korambu | Temporary wall of brushwood, grass and mud laid across channels to raise the level of water | Kerala |
14. Eastern Coastal Plains | Yeri | Tank | Tamilnadu |
Ooranis | Pond | Tamilnadu | |
15. The Islands | Jackwells | Bamboo pipes are used to lead water into shallow pits | Great Nicobar Island |
(source-http://cpreec.org/)
so, we see that our country is so much rich in traditional knowledge related to water harvesting....
water harvesting down the ages in India-
India has a rich history of water harvesting systems-
Tanks in the Indus – Sarasvati Valley
The excavations at Harappa and Mohenjodaro reveal deep rectangular constructions that were probably the earliest tanks built in India.
3rd millennium B.C. | Dams built of stone rubble were found in Baluchistan and Kutch |
3000 – 1500 B.C. | Indus - Sarasvati Civilization had several reservoirs to collect rainwater runoff. Each house had an individual well |
321 – 291 B.C. | Archeological evidence for dams, lakes and irrigation systems in the time of Chandragupta Maurya’s rule |
3rd Century B.C. | Kautilya’s Arthasastra mentions irrigation using water harvesting systems |
1st Century B.C. | Sringaverapura near Allahabad had a sophisticated water harvesting system using the floodwaters of the Ganges |
2nd Century A.D. | Grand Anicut or Kallanai built by Karikala Chola across the river Cauvery to divert water for irrigation is still functional |
11th Century A.D. | King Bhoja of Bhopal built the largest artificial lake (65,000 acres) in India fed by streams and springs |
12th Century A.D. | Rajatarangini by Kalhana describes a well- maintained irrigation system in Kashmir. |
a. In the hills and mountainous regions where there are plenty of streams, simple engineering structures were used to divert the water into channels that fed the fields. The structures became more sophisticated and much bigger when the streams turned to rivers.
b. In the arid and semi-arid regions, where the streams are more seasonal, the diversion channels first led the water to a storage structure like a tank for later use. Storage systems to collect just runoff from the watershed were also built.
c. In the flood plains, several unique systems to control and harness the floodwaters were devised.
d. In the coastal areas where there is danger of river water turning saline, several ingenious ways came up to regulate the flow of saline water.
e. In regions with good groundwater aquifers, dugwells with innovative methods to lift the water were in use. Deep wells were dug in the beds of tanks and rivers, both to serve as a source of good water when the water recedes and also to recharge the groundwater when they are fully submerged.f. In areas where rainfall is the only option, people devised methods to literally “catch rainwater where it fell”.
so, it proves that the intellectual level of our ancestors was so high.... they knew the needs of water harvesting and fully aware of the ecology, geography, geology etc.Now following our ancestors it is our duty to conserve nature and natural water by practising water harvesting because storage of water by forming waterbodies leads to the percolation of standing water into the ground and recharging the water table.Wells in the surrounding areas have plenty of good water that increases Green cover in the sorrounding areas. these systems help in reduction of floods and runoff ....and protect life and livelihood......
Save water....save future....................
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