Godavari is a sacred river rises from Trambakeshvar
Nasik and flows eastward across the Deccan Plateau, along the
Maharashtra-Andhra Pradesh border and across Andhra Pradesh state, turning
southeastward for the last 200 miles of its course before reaching the Bay of
Bengal. There it empties via its two mouths: the Gautami Godavari to the north
and the Vasishta Godavari to the south. Its total length is 910 miles, and it
has a drainage basin of 121,000 square miles.
From its source to the Eastern Ghats, the Godavari
River flows through gentle, somewhat monotonous terrain, along the way
receiving the Darna, Purna, Manjra, Pranhita, and Indravati rivers. Upon
entering the Eastern Ghats region, however, the river flows between steep and
precipitous banks, its width contracting until it flows through a deep cleft
only 600 feet wide, Gorge.
On either side wooded hills rise almost vertically
from the waters. Having passed through the Eastern Ghats, the river widens
again, traversing wide plains, the low islands in its stream being used for
tobacco growing. At this point the Godavari flows placidly. Just above the town
of Rajahmundry, a dam was constructed on the river in 1948 to provide
irrigation and hydroelectric power.
The upper reaches of the Godavari are dry in winter
and spring, making it virtually useless for irrigation. At its mouths, however,
the development of a navigable irrigation-canal system, linking its delta with
that of the Krishna River to the southwest, has made the land one of the
richest rice-growing areas of India.
The Godavari, throughout its entire length, is
sacred to the people.
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