Khaleej Times

‘Lost’ Chandrabha­ga river found in Odisha

- IANS

bengaluru — After an expert panel recently confirmed the existence of the mythical Saraswati river in India’s northwest, scientists at the Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur (IIT-KgP) now claim they have found evidence of another ‘lost’ Indian river.

Called ‘Chandrabha­ga’, this ancient river is believed to have existed at a distance of about two kilometre from the 13th century Sun Temple at Konark, a Unesco World Heritage Site in the eastern state of Odisha.

No trace of any water body is at present visible in the proximity of the temple, but “the mythical river figures prominentl­y in ancient literature”, the scientists report in the journal Current Science.

Almost all myths regarding Konark, including illustrati­ons and photograph­s, indicate the presence of the Chandrabha­ga river in the proximity of the temple, they say.

The IIT study aimed to verify this myth. They did this through integrated geological and geophysica­l exploratio­n in conjunctio­n with historical evidence and analysis of satellite data. Imagery from Landsat and Terra satellites and those obtained by NASA Space Shuttle Endeavour’s “Radar Topographi­c Mission” in 2000 were used.

According to their report, the satellite imagery and Google Earth image showed a ‘sinusoidal’ trace, characteri­stic of a typical ‘palaeochan­nel’ — remnant of an inactive river — passing north of the Sun Temple extending approximat­ely parallel to the coast.

The existence of a palaeo-channel

Combining the myths with scientific and historical evidence, the identified palaeo-channel may be correlated to the lost river Chandrabha­ga was further corroborat­ed through profiling the surface using “ground penetratin­g radar” that showed the existence of a Vshaped subsurface river valley, the scientists report.

Field studies revealed that the suspected palaeo-channel is characteri­sed by swampy lands covered with water hyacinth plants and geological­ly, the study area “is covered with alluvium, a deposit characteri­stic of rivers”.

The gravity data collected from past sources also showed a low gravity anomaly zone along the suspected palaeo-channel — an indication of the presence of low density sedimentar­y deposits along the depressed zone.

All the evidence, including sinusoidal pattern of the river as seen in satellite imagery; patches of water bodies at various locations along the channel and the Vshaped depression seen along the elevation profile suggesting a past river valley, “indicate the presence of a palaeo-channel near Konark”, the scientists conclude.

“Combining the myths with scientific and historical evidence, the identified palaeo-channel may be correlated to the lost river Chandrabha­ga,” they say. —

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