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The list of rivers of Odisha state, located in Eastern India. They are tributaries to the Bay of Bengal of the Indian Ocean. Rivers. Baitarani River;
This page was last edited on 5 February 2019, at 23:31 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The rivers of Odisha and their tributaries have cut deep and narrow valleys in this region. The Odisha highlands are also known as the Garhjat Hills. This region is well marked by a number of watersheds. A number of river valleys of varying width and flood plains dissect the Eastern Ghats in this region. The average height of this region is ...
The Birupa River is a river which flows through the Indian states of Chhattisgarh and Odisha. [1] [2] It is a distributary of the Mahanadi River.It originates from the Mahanadi's upper reaches and joins the Brahmani River at Krushnanagar before emptying into the Bay of Bengal at Dhamra. [3]
Daringbadi, where the river originates, is called the ' Kashmir of Odisha '. The river lies within the geographical coordinates of 19.07 to 20.19 north latitude and 84.01 to 85.06 east longitude. It meets the Bay of Bengal at Puruna Bandha in Ganjam. Its tributaries are the Baghua, the Dhanei, the Badanadi etc. It has no delta as such at its mouth.
A map of the Mahanadi-Koyakhai distributary system. The Prachi, a small river [1] of over 78 km [2] in length with a catchment area of around 600 km 2, [citation needed] is a part of the Mahanadi River Delta in Odisha [3] along the eastern coast of India. Presently the parts of the modern day districts of Puri, Khurda, Cuttack and Jagatsingpur ...
The total length of the river is 395 kilometres (245 mi). [1] The basin of the Subarnarekha is smaller than most multi-state river basins in India. The rain-fed river covers a drainage area of 18,951 square kilometres (7,317 sq mi) [1]
Ong River is a tributary of Mahanadi river. It flows across Odisha and joins Mahanadi 240 km (150 mi) upstream of Sonepur where the Tel merges. The river rises at an elevation of 457 m (1,499 ft) and runs 204 km (127 mi) before it meets the Mahanadi. It drains an area of about 5,128 km 2 (1,980 sq mi).