(Redirected from Meghna)
A Map showing major rivers in Bangladesh including Meghna.
The 'Surma-Meghna River System' is an important river complex in
South Asia, one of the three that forms the
Ganges Delta and the largest on earth. It rises in the Manipur Hills of northeast India as the
Barak River and flows west becoming the
Surma River and then flows south as the
Meghna River, a total of 946 km (669 km within Bangladesh) to the
Bay of Bengal.
Course
Barak
Main articles: Barak River
From its source in the Manipur Hills near Mao Songsang, the river is known as the Barak River. It flows west through Manipur State, then southwest leaving Manipur. The principal tributaries of the Barak in India are the Jirl, the Dhaleshwari, the Singla, the Longai, the Sonai and the Katakhal.
In Mizoram State it flows southwest then veers abruptly north when joined by a north flowing stream and flows into Assam State where it turns westward again near Lakipur and flows west past the town of Silchar where it enters Bangladesh.
In the upper part, the river receives a lot of little hill streams, namely, Gumti, Howrah, Kagni, Senai Buri, Hari Mangal, Kakrai, Kurulia, Balujhuri, Shonaichhari and Durduria.
Surma
Main articles: Surma River
At the border with Bangladesh, the river divides with the northern branch being called the Surma River and the southern the
Kushiyara River. This is where the river enters the Sylhet Depression (or trough) which forms the
Surma Basin.
[1]
The Surma is fed by tributaries from the Meghalaya Hills to the north, and is also known as the Baulai River after it is joined by the south-flowing Someswari River.
The Kushiyara receives tributaries from the Sylhet Hills and Tripura Hills to the south, the principal one from the Tripura Hills being the Manu. The Kushiyara is also known as the Kalni River after it is joined by a major offshoot (distributary) from the Surma. When the Surma and the Kushiyara finally rejoin in
Kishoreganj District above Bhairab Bazar, the river is known as the Meghna River.
Meghna
Main articles: Meghna River
The Meghna is formed inside
Bangladesh above
Bhairab Bazar by the combination of the
Surma and
Kushiyara rivers. Down to
Chandpur, Meghna is hydrographically referred to as the Upper Meghna. After the
Padma] joins, it is referred to as the Lower Meghna.

River Meghna from the bridge over the river
In Daudkandi,
Comilla, Meghna is joined by the great river
Gomoti, created by the combination of many streams. This river reinforces Meghna a lot and increases the waterflow considerably. The pair of bridges over Meghna and Gomoty are two of the country's largest bridges.
The name for the largest distributary of the Ganges in Bangladesh is the
Padma River. When the Padma joins with the
Jamuna River, the largest distributary of the Brahmaputra, and they join with the Meghna in
Chandpur District, the result is the Lower Meghna.
After
Chandpur, with the combined flow of the
Padma and
Jamuna, it moves down to the
Bay of Bengal in an almost straight line. In the course from Chandpur to the Bay of Bengal, the Meghna braids into a number of little rivers, but the main flow is through the Meghna Estuary.
Near
Bhola, just before flowing into the ''Bay of Bengal'', the river divides into two main streams in the Ganges delta and separates an island from both sides of the mainland. The western stream is called 'Ilsha' and the eastern one is called 'Bamni'.
Economics
Notes
1. Mannan, Abdul (2002) "Stratigraphic evolution and geochemistry of the Neogene Surma Group, Surma Basin, Sylhet, Bangladesh" University of Oulu, Oulu, Bangladesh, ISBN 951-42-6710-9
See also
★
List of rivers in Bangladesh