Fishing boats, on the Brahmaputra river, in Gauhati, Assam, Northeast India. Brahmaputra the major river of Central and South Asia, flows some 1,800 miles, 2,900 kilometers, from its source in the Himalayas to its confluence with the Ganges River, after which the mingled waters of the two rivers fall into the Bay of Bengal. Along its course it passes through the Tibet - Autonomous Region of China, the Indian states of Arun?chal Pradesh and Assam, and Bangladesh. For most of its length, the river serves as an important inland waterway; it is not, however, navigable between the mountains of Tibe


Fishing boats, on the Brahmaputra river, in Gauhati, Assam, Northeast India. Brahmaputra the major river of Central and South Asia, flows some 1,800 miles, 2,900 kilometers, from its source in the Himalayas to its confluence with the Ganges River, after which the mingled waters of the two rivers fall into the Bay of Bengal. Along its course it passes through the Tibet - Autonomous Region of China, the Indian states of Arun?chal Pradesh and Assam, and Bangladesh. For most of its length, the river serves as an important inland waterway; it is not, however, navigable between the mountains of Tibet and the plains of India. In its lower course, the river is both a creator and a destroyer—depositing huge quantities of fertile alluvial soil but also causing disastrous and frequent floods. Source: Britannica online encyclopedia.


Size: 6300px × 4211px
Photo credit: © Shahidul Alam / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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