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Chinese scientist traces origin of Indus river to southwest China | A Chinese scientist has challenged the origin of the river Indus, claiming that its origin located in a valley northeast of Kailash, the highest peak of the Gangdise Mountain, in the west region of Tibet, southwest of China. More than 100 years after Swedish explorer Sven Hedin
announced the discovery of the origin of the Indus river, Liu Shaochuang, a researcher
with the Institute of Remote Sensing Applications under the Chinese Academy of
Sciences, has re-examined the origin of the river. Shaochuang used high-resolution,
remote-sensing satellite images and a field investigation to come up with a new
finding. "The headstream, called Banggokong by local Tibetans, is about 30 kilometers
away from the place that Sven Hedin believed was the source of the river," said
Shaochuang. Shaochuang used remote-sensing images, with a resolution of up to
2.5 meters, provided by the French SPOT satellite system, to find the longest
headstream of the Indus River , reports English.news.cn. He also made a field
investigation at the source of Indus at the end of September to make sure it contained
water, even in the dry season. It's commonly accepted among the international
geographical community that the source of a river is defined as the longest branch
in the drainage basin. The source should have water running all through the year.
The Indus river, with a total length of around 3,000 kilometers, runs through
China , India and Pakistan and the the ancient Indus civilization was one of the
earliest to produce food using agricultural theories in the world. |
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