The Indus is a transboundary river of Asia and a trans-Himalayan river
of South and Central Asia. The
3,180 km (1,980 mi) river rises in Western Tibet,
flows northwest through the Ladakh and Gilgit-Baltistan regions
of Kashmir,
bends sharply to the left after the Nanga Parbat massif,
and flows south-by-southwest through Pakistan,
before it empties into the Arabian Sea near
the port city of Karachi.
The river has a
total drainage area exceeding 1,165,000 km2 (450,000 sq mi).
Its estimated annual flow is around 243 km3 (58 cu mi),
making it one of the 50 largest rivers in the world in terms of average annual flow.[10] Its
left-bank tributary in Ladakh is the Zanskar River,
and its left-bank tributary in the plains is the Panjnad River which
itself has five major tributaries, namely the Chenab, Jhelum, Ravi, Beas,
and Sutlej rivers.
Its principal right-bank tributaries are the Shyok, Gilgit, Kabul, Kurram,
and Gomal rivers.
Beginning in a mountain spring and fed with glaciers and
rivers in the Himalayan, Karakoram,
and Hindu Kush ranges,
the river supports the ecosystems of temperate
forests, plains, and arid countryside.
The northern part of the
Indus Valley, with its tributaries, forms the Punjab region
of South Asia, while the lower course of the river ends in a large delta in
the southern Sindh province
of Pakistan. The river has historically been important to many cultures of the
region. The 3rd millennium BCE saw the rise of Indus Valley Civilisation, a major urban
civilization of the Bronze Age. During the 2nd millennium BCE, the Punjab region was
mentioned in the Rigveda hymns as Sapta Sindhu and in
the Avesta religious
texts as Saptha Hindu (both terms meaning "seven rivers").
Early historical kingdoms that arose in the Indus Valley include Gandhāra,
and the Ror dynasty of Sauvīra. The Indus River came into the knowledge of the Western world early
in the classical period, when King Darius of Persia sent
his Greek subject Scylax of Caryanda to explore the river,
c. 515 BCE. In Sanskrit, the river
Indus called SINDHU.
“Gange
cha yamune chaiva Godavari Sarasvathi l
Narmade SINDHU Kaveri Jale(a)smin Sannidhim
Kuru ll
This is great information. Sindhu festival in Leh on the banks of this river has it's own glory.
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