Brahmaputra shifting southward: Expert
  
GUWAHATI, Sentinel Assam, May 2: The Brahmaputra would have caused immense 
peril to major human habitats of Asom if there were no man-made flood control 
measures.
Geomorphological evidences have suggested that the river is gradually shifting 
more than two km towards south from its present course.
An expert in the State Water Resources Department told UNI that the southward 
drift of the Brahmaputra is aggressive at places like Polashbari in Kamrup 
district, Hatimura in Morigaon and Nimati Hatisal, Kokilamukh and Kolbari in 
Jorhat district.
However, the rate of the drift has of late been retarded by the spurs and 
bullheads erected at the vulnerable areas.
“This is not an instant process. It has been going on for years. We have found 
through studies that the Brahmaputra has shifted more than 10 km from 1915 to 
1998,” an expert said.
Referring to an official study conducted by a senior research officer from 
Pune, the expert said it is because of the flood control measures like — spurs, 
bullheads, porcupines and revetments — taken all along the course of the river, 
that the shift has been temporarily retarded to a great extent.
Slow deformation of the Indian subcontinent due to horizontal movement of the 
tectonic plates and the subsequent rise of the Himalayas are contributing 
factors to the southward shifting of the river.
According to geomorphologists, the Indian plate is moving towards the 
North-east at 18 mm every year, while the Himalayas are rising at about five mm 
each year.
However, some rocky mountains like the Burapahar (near Kaziranga), Karbi hills, 
Meghalaya hills and Garo hills are preventing the river from drifting.
The expert claimed that places is like Nimatighat in Jorhat, the shift has been 
aggressive. “It was up to 3 km between 1986 and 2001,” he added. The spurs 
erected at places along the river, like Dibrugarh Town Protection Spurs, Nimati 
Hatisal spurs, Rangapara spurs (both in Jorhat) and Dhubri town protection 
spurs have checked the drift of the river.
The expert further said that there would be no fear of devastation because of 
the flood control measures adopted.
Besides deflectors, and other short-term erosion control measures have also 
retarded the slide.
“The life of the spurs are not more than 50 years,” he cautioned. He further 
stressed the need to initiate long-term erosion control measures.
Specifically pointing to Morigaon and Nagaon districts, which are stated to be 
the most vulnerable areas as of now, the expert said the future of Nagaon town 
lies on the Hatimura embankment.
“If the dyke is breached, the Brahmaputra may flow southward through Kalang and 
submerge major portions of Nagaon, Sonapur and even Dispur,” he warned.
Ruing at the failure of the proposed Dihang-Dibang multipurpose project in 
Arunachal Pradesh, the expert said, “Had it been constructed, it would have 
tamed the Brahmaputra to a great extent”. Alluding to another study, he said 
another geophysicist had said: “In the last 100 years, the Brahmaputra has 
shifted nearly 22 km towards south in middle Asom”. As a result of the shifting 
hundreds of bills were formed on the north bank, like Majuli bill, Miri bill 
and Salmari bill, he observed. UNI

       
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