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Seti Gandaki River

Coordinates: 27°49′16″N 84°27′17″E / 27.8211°N 84.4546°E / 27.8211; 84.4546
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Seti Gandaki
Seti Gandaki from Ramghat Pokhara
Map
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationSlopes of Annapurna
Basin features
River systemGandaki River

The Seti Gandaki River, also known as the Seti River or the Seti Khola, is a river of western Nepal, a left tributary of the Trishuli River. Its gorges around Pokhara are a major attraction for tourists worldwide.


Geography

It rises from the base of the Annapurna massif, and flows south and south-east past Pokhara and Damauli to join the Trishuli River near Devghat.

The lakes of Pokhara were created through a geological process. As the Seti river carried the moraine from Annapurna Himalayas after the burst of glacial lakes at various pre-historical time periods, the moraine were deposited on the routes of the rivers. This caused formation of natural lakes.

Cultural and Religious Significance

Seti is one of the holiest rivers of Nepal, worshiped in Hinduism as a form of Vishnu. The river is also famous because it is close to some Holy places and is the central point of many stories of Hindu mythology, such as the Mahabharata, one of longest books of Hinduism, written by Vyasa, who was born near the confluence of the Gandaki and Madi rivers near Damauli, Tanahun, Nepal. Gandaki River .[1]

Gorges


Tributaries

Its major tributary are Mardi Khola, Kali khola, Phedi khola, Bijayapur khola, Khudi khola, Pudi khola, Suraudi khola, Bange khola and the largest tributary Madi. Pokhara, Leknath, Suklagandaki, Bhimad and Damauli are the cities through which Seti river flows .[2]

Exploration

The Seti Gandaki was successfully descended for the first time in June 1971 by Daniel C. Taylor and Jennifer Ide. They went by raft, having to portage around the three kilometer section where the whole Seti river goes underground.[3]

2012 Flood

In May 2012 a devastating flood on the river killed more than 70 people north of Pokhara and changed the course of the river.

Pollution


Dams


Bridges

References

  1. ^ Negi, Sharad Singh. Himalayan rivers, lakes and glaciers. Google books. Retrieved 2013-05-09. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ BBC News, 6 May 2013
  3. ^ Daniel Taylor-Ide "Something Hidden Behind the Ranges" (San Francisco: Mercury House Press, 1995)
  4. ^ [1]

27°49′16″N 84°27′17″E / 27.8211°N 84.4546°E / 27.8211; 84.4546