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The Bagmati River[n 1] flows through the Kathmandu valley of Nepal, separating the cities of Kathmandu and Patan, before flowing through Madesh Province of southern Nepal and joining the Kamla River in the Indian state of Bihar. It is considered holy by both Hindus and Buddhists. A number of Hindu temples are located on its banks.
175 m. Reservoir. Total capacity. 850,000 m 3. Catchment area. 0.3 km 2[ 1] Dhap Dam ( Nepali: धाप बांध) is a concrete faced rockfill dam located in Bagmati Province of Nepal. The dam is 24 m high and 175 m wide. It can store 850,000 m 3 of water when full.
Bagmati Zone. Bagmati Zone (Nepali: बागमती अञ्चल Listen ⓘ Bāgmatī Añcal) was one of the fourteen zones of Nepal until the restoration of zones to Provinces. Its headquarters are Kathmandu. It was named after the Bagmati River. It was in the Central Development Region of Nepal. The districts are now all part of Bagmati ...
The project is an inter-basin transfer project to transfer water from Sunkoshi River to the Marin Khola, a tributary of Bagmati River. The flow will be discharged to the Bagmati Irrigation System to irrigate additional 122,000 ha of land in Rautahat, Dhanusha, Mahottari, Sarlahi and Bara. [4] The design flow of the project is 67 m3/s.
Lakhandei River. The Lakhandei River is a river in southern Nepal and in the state of Bihar in India. It is a main tributary of the Bagmati River. [1] In Nepal, the river basin lies in the Sarlahi District, and the river originates in the Sivalik Hills. [2] The river enters India in the Sitamarhi district of Bihar, and flows through the town of ...
Bagmati Province (Nepali: बागमती प्रदेश, Bāgmatī pradēśa) [1][2] is one of the seven provinces of Nepal established by the constitution of Nepal. [3] Bagmati is Nepal's second-most populous province and fifth largest province by area. It is bordered by Tibet Autonomous Region of China to the north, Gandaki Province ...
Human impact on river systems. Many river systems are shaped by human activity and through anthropogenic forces. [1] The process of human influence on nature, including rivers, is stated with the beginning of the Anthropocene, which has replaced the Holocene. [citation needed] This long-term impact is analyzed and explained by a wide range of ...
Google Scholar is a freely accessible web search engine that indexes the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across an array of publishing formats and disciplines. . Released in beta in November 2004, the Google Scholar index includes peer-reviewed online academic journals and books, conference papers, theses and dissertations, preprints, abstracts, technical reports, and other ...