4.6 Article

Bankline change and the facets of riverine hazards in the floodplain of Subansiri-Ranganadi Doab, Brahmaputra Valley, India

Journal

NATURAL HAZARDS
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages 1015-1028

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-012-0283-5

Keywords

Bankline shift; Riverine hazards; Subansiri; Ranganadi; Breaches

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Subansiri-Ranganadi Doab (confluence country), located in Lakhimpur district, Assam, is one of the worst flood-affected areas in Brahmaputra valley. The Doab is well populated, and land around these rivers is extensively used for cultivation. As means of flood protection, embankments were constructed in the 1950s along the banks of both the rivers. On the other hand, these rivers are dynamic in terms of banklines and other forms of channel changes. Progressive migration of bankline, due to erosion, results in loss of cultivable land. Moreover, it causes breaches in the embankments increasing the severity of flood in the Doab. This paper attempts to study the changes in the banklines of two major rivers in the floodplains of the Subansiri-Ranganadi Doab during 1997-2009 in the context of the riverine hazards it brings to the floodplain dwellers. The shift of the banklines in Subansiri-Ranganadi Doab, downstream of North Lakhimpur, has been estimated using IRS LISS imageries of 1997 and 2009 in GIS environment. The river Subansiri during the study period has migrated westward and has widened substantially resulting in erosion of an area of similar to 19.137 km(2). For Ranganadi, the total area that has been eroded due to channel changes is similar to 0.897 km(2). The channel changes are mainly due to concave bank erosion associated with high stages of flow. Channel widening in Subansiri and Ranganadi in the study area during the decades of 1990s and 2000 has led to frequent breaches in the embankments. Lateral erosion and inundation due to embankment failure are the most dominant facets of riverine hazards in the study area as these lead to loss of livelihood. Therefore, it is necessary to incorporate geomorphic changes in formulating flood management programmes.

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