Ground Water in Hyderabad & Khairpur Divisions
Ground Water in Hyderabad & Khairpur Divisions
Ground Water in Hyderabad & Khairpur Divisions
IN
HYDERABAD
&
KHAIRPUR DIVISIONS
By
M. H. Panhwar
Directorate of Agriculture,
Hyderabad Region
1969
CHAPTER I
Page No.
ITRODUCTIO 12
CHAPTER II
KOHISTA AREA 17
Geology of area—Manchhar series, Nari calcareous series, Nari grey sand-stone,
Nari lime-stone, Khairthar Range, Ranikot sand-stone, Decan trap basalt rocks,
Nais of Kohistan.
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
DESERT ZOE 44
Formation of Rann of Kuchh, Formation of Thar desert, Nagarparkar area, Pat
area.
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
ITERODUCTIO 118
Figure No. 7. Principle of encroachment of brackish water an sweet water when rate of
pumping exceeds that of replenishment 74
Figure No. 9. Principle of induced recharge resulting from a well pumping near a river
canal, lake, or stream 91
Figure No. 10. Slow speed wind mill and storage tank 97
Figure No. 12. Tube well for alluvial plains when water table is upto maximum of 40 ft.
106
Figure No. 13. Dug well or open surface well fitted with horizontal centrifugal pump and
diesel engine 107
Figure No. 14. Principle of operation of a deep well turbine pump 108
Figure No. 15. Open well fitted with vertical centrifugal pump 109
Figure No. 17. Ground water infiltration pattern, caused by Dams or Barrages 127
Figure No.18. Profile of partially penetrating well and how It results in ultimately
pumping brackish water 144
Figure No. 20. Partially penetrating well with screen length alternated with blank pipes to
reduce the convergence of flow. 145
Figure No. 22. Multi aquifer well with water a different hydrostatic pressure, resulting in
poor yield. 150
Figure No. 23. Measuring water discharge from rise of water column above pipe. 151
Figure No. 24. Measuring water discharge from a horizontal pipe 152
Figure No. 25 Measuring discharge from a partially full horizontal pipe 153
Figure No. 26 A typical arrangement for pumping water with compressed air 154
The first edition of the book came out in 1964 and went out of print the same
year. As theories in the book were based on geology, geography, history, archaeology,
chemistry and civil engineering, large scale criticism and controversy was anticipated,
but fortunately the specialists in these fields showed appreciation for the work. I had
however to wait for voluminous report of Messers Huntings technical services, who had
put in above five years work in the same area on ground water. Their report came out in
1966 stating clearly that my ground water maps were remarkably accurate. I had done no
detailed work on Nara command. Messers Huntings stated that area along both sides of
Nara canal was unsuitable for ground water development. To verify the truth of above
statement we had to carry out a two years detailed investigation which showed contrary
results as discussed in the additional notes of this book.
Since the first edition did not need any change in text, instead of revising it new
findings have been incorporated in additional notes. Due to increase in the number of
tube wells, there is more interest in chemical composition of water. For the interest of
general reader this aspect has been discussed in details. An experimental wind mill was
installed at Tandojam in 1965. After three years study some conclusions about its
application could be drawn which have also been incorporated in the additional notes.
The publication had its economic repercussion. The sweet and brackish water
areas being well defined tube-wells installation was no longer a chance or gamble. No
prior test boring was needed. In six years since the first edition, 2,000 tube-wells have
been sunk and interest is on the increase. The price of land in sweet water belt has also
shot up.
In order to have an idea of some broad indications of sweet water, I turned to the
writings of O.E. Meinzer, who a quarter of a century ago, had suggested that plants could
indicate ground water, and its quality and quantity to some extent. This method could not
be applied to the lower Indus Basin (i.e. Hyderabad and Khairpur divisions), because
from the irrigated tracts the original plantation had been mercilessly removed, in the early
days of the North Western Railway, the locomotives of which used wood as a fuel.
Whatever wild growth remained was removed as the development of Sukkur Barrage
lands progressed. The new plantation that followed, were the gift of human hand and
barrage water and, therefore, could not indicate the ground water conditions. Meinzer had
done the work in a climate, which was colder than what prevails in this region, and the
plant species he discussed were also different. Applications of that theory, therefore, to
this area could not give proper results. His theories could at the best be applied to the
desert tract of the region, which in any case, is devoid of high water table and where
shrubs showing no leafy growth thrive. Nevertheless, a separate chapter on plants as
indicators of ground water has been incorporated in the book. It will definitely be of
interest, if some student of botany, in collaboration with agricultural engineering section,
started research on this protect and came out with a finding on the relation of various
plants to the ground water table, its quality and quantity, in our prevailing conditions and
circumstances.
Having failed in this method at least partly, I made an attempt to survey the
shallow wells in the region. Shallow wells or the open surface wells, used for Rabi
irrigation prior to commencement of Sukkur Barrage, have lost their utility. After 1932,
majority of the wells in the Sukkur Barrage area were abandoned. Due to continuous
evaporation from them, they show high salinity, which is not representative of the ground
water of the area. Some how, a few wells, in some villages, have survived for drinking
purposes and have been worked regularly. The depth of these wells, when originally
constructed, must not have been more than 6' to 10' below the water table, but with the
At a number of places, people have installed hand pumps, which at times are sixty
feet deep, but information about the exact depth is not known even to the owners. From
this information, however, I could at least segregate the areas, where one should not look
for sweet water at greater depths. It was also seen that the quality of water in general was
better, when we moved closer to the river Indus. This made it clear that the sweet water
in the region was mainly due to the presence of river Indus, from which, it seems,
enormous quantities of water are seeping on both sides. Simultaneously, it occurred to me
that in the past when the river changed its courses, it must have diluted the original
brackish water on both of its banks, and unless this water is drained out, or encroached
upon by the former, these reservoirs could remain intact for centuries. Of course, some of
the water from these reservoirs must have been lost due to the transpiration from the
plants, but this would only be a very limited quantity, as the trees can send their roots to
shallow depths only. There was also a possibility that water from these reservoirs may
have seeped out to the sea, but rates of seepage under, normal conditions which exist
here, could not exceed a few hundred feet per year. It was worthwhile, therefore, finding
out basically the location of river Indus from time to time. Obviously I was not interested
in the location of the Indus at the time of Mohenjo-Daro or in 3000 B.C. and before or
immediately after. But information about the last 1000 years or so, could definitely be
useful and serve as a guide for future, even for other arid zones under similar conditions.
To find out the old beds of the river, it required the study of historic historical
geography of Hyderabad and Khairpur divisions, and unfortunately there was lack of
information on this subject. Two books, one by Raverty and another by Haig, printed in
1892 and 1894 respectively, were, however, on hand for reference. The former had
started under a misconception that Eastern Nara was one time the bed of Sutlej, which he
called Mehran of Sind. According to him, Indus with all other rivers of the Punjab
discharged into Mehran and all these were the tributaries of the latter. Though a good
work, running into 350 pages, its greatest defect was that the author came out with
theories, which were discarded at one time or the other, by engineers, hydrologists and
historians. Major General Haig, who seems to have been aware of the controversy,
limited himself to the investigation of the lower Delta, the portion lying below Hyderabad
and now commanded mostly by Ghulam Mohammad Barrage. The latter's work though it
has only been partly superseded since, was not of much use for my investigations,
because in Ghulam Mohammad Barrage tract ground water is brackish any way. I,
therefore, started studying the old beds of river Indus, as I physically saw them existing
in different parts of the two divisions, and tried to check them with rare historical books
including those of Raverty and Haig. As a cross check, I also examined the contours of
these beds and the adjoining areas.
The work done by Indian Archaeological Department was started nearly a century
ago in 1861. In the first phase the policy of the Government was preservation of the old
monuments, and the work there under can be called "Monumental Archaeology". During
this period, the work produced by Henry Cousens, completed in 1907 and printed in
1929, is the only work worth mentioning for our purpose. He had taken pains to locate
ruins of various towns in Sind, and he was a firm believer that the destruction of these old
towns in this region could not have been due either to the ill-famed and mostly imaginary
tyrant King Dilu Rai, who is popularly believed to have always been running after
beautiful maidens, or to the earth-quakes, ascribed to the wrath of God. He felt that most
of the towns in this region were destroyed or abandoned due to desertion of the river
Indus. From his studies, clues to seine courses of River Indus could thus be had,
facilitating further investigations in the problem.
In the second phase of life of the Indian Archaeological Department, the work,
which was started in 1902, had behind it the strength, vigour, view, and fore-sight of
Lord Curzon, who laid down the aims of the department of archaeology to be "To dig and
discover, to classify, reproduce and describe, to copy and decipher and to cherish and
conserve". Unfortunately, during this phase, it was the search for classical monuments
like Mohenjo-Daro and other sites of pre-historic Indus valley civilization, which claimed
the sole attention. Thus the archaeological work done during this period does not help us
in our search for the courses of river in historical times. In Thirties, Majumdar, a young
archaeologist, started explorations in the Kohistan area between Thano Bula Khan and
Shahdadkot, looking for pre-historic sites. His information printed in 1934, has, on the
other hand, definitely helped in the understanding of ground water in Kohistan tract.
In the third phase, which started with Wheeler in 1944, new foundations of
archaeology were laid down: After the Independence, he became for some time the
Director of Archaeology of Pakistan. According to him, the purpose of archaeology is
digging up not things, but people. During this phase, however, only one site has been
unearthed in this area to date, which too cannot, throw much light on the beds of river
Indus. This place; Bharnbhore, is given out to be a small congested trading centre, very
populous in its heyday, on the right bank of the very mouth of Gharo, a channel of river
Indus then, but so located that it could be considered to be placed, both on the north and
the east of the river. It is also believed to be a port, and its importance is thus said to be
mainly due to its being a harbour. Historians and travellers have, however, never
mentioned such a place (unless it be Debal).
During this study, quite a good bit of information was, however, collected about
the old beds of the Indus through the region. It was my belief that in arid zones there is
always seepage from river, and that this water could remain there for even a thousand
years. I, therefore could easily forestall presence of ground water and even make a sort of
estimate of its quality and quantity, if I had a firm grip on an old course of the river and
the bearings of a particular place on it. In 90% of the cases when actual drilling was done
the results were surprisingly closer to those already predicted.
After I958 more and more people got interested in tube wells, and over a period of
last five years, we drilled at no less than 800 places in the region with surprisingly good
results. Some bores were also put in the rocky area, and after finding success in a few
such cases too, the study of geology of western Sind was done in due course to
understand the natural formations and behaviour of water in them.
Mr. B.B. Desai, Deputy Director of Agriculture, Sind. (1940) who had been in the
Thar desert in connection with the locust campaign, had indicated sweet water supplies in
Nagarparkar Area. A survey of the Thar area was therefore undertaken, samples of water
collected, analysed and the results plotted on, maps.
On the basis of the data, collected from the bores drilled over a period of five
years (1958-63), a ground water map was finally prepared. The map showed that water
from Kashmore to Sehwan on the right bank and from Ubauro to Miani Forests (8 miles
north of Hyderabad) on the left bank was sweet. The width of this belt varied. A close
study of the material in hand, showed that generally speaking wherever Indus had flowed
for more than two centuries or so, it left sweet water in a very wide belt, sometimes five
miles on either side. Even where the river deserted the place a thousand to twelve
hundred years back, the water was sweet. If the river had flowed at a particular place for
shorter period, or was a non-perennial channel, flowing in the inundation season only,
water was sweet in a narrow belt and to a shallower depth. It was also found that the
quality and quantity of water was affected by many other factors, like calcareous and
agrillarious formations. Further study revealed, that in the delta area, which has emerged
out of sea only recently, the salt contents of the ground water were so high, that the river
water had failed to dilute them except to shallow depths, and in a very narrow belt, which
was probably not beyond the present protective embankments.
The Sukkur Barrage commands 7.8 million acres of land, out of which only 4.1
million have been put under cultivation so far. The rest of the area is not being cultivated,
primarily because of shortage of water, though there are other contributory factors also.
In order to increase the intensity from the present more or less 55% to at least the
In the Kohistan area, people depend on grazing of cattle for their livelihood. They
are nomads in the true sense, and there are no permanent villages or towns worth the
name. With location of sweet water in that area, permanent settlements could be
established. Nagarparkar is another area having great potential of ground water
development.
The occurrence of ground water in any area depends on the geological and
geographical conditions. The quality of water is affected by the salt contents of the
geological deposits and the drainability of the area. The geography of area governs the
subsequent flow of water over the surface, the rate of evaporation, transpiration and
percolation in the ground. The original water, therefore, slowly keeps changing,
depending on in-take and off-take.
Geographically, Hyderabad and Khairpur divisions are divided into three main
areas. Geologically also the region in general, is divided in the same three groups—the
geology of each group being different from the other. These three groups occupy
approximately 1/3rd of the area of each of the two Divisions. In the following chapters,
these groups are separately discussed in details.
CHAPTER II
THE KOHISTA AREA
In the geological times a mighty river named Siwalik was flowing from the
present Assam westwards to Potwar, where it changed its course and ended in the present
Arabian sea. The river brought lot of gravel, silt and sand with it, which was deposited in
the lndo-Gangetic plains. However, the Potwar area slowly rose up, and in time, the river
changed its course eastwards. The western part was taken over by the Indus and its
tributaries.
About 60
million years back,
the Cretaceous rocks
in the Laki range
rose, throwing up the
present lower Dadu
district from the
Tethys sea. This
happened when
Himalayas had not
risen above the
ground. When
Himalayas started
rising, the river Indus
went on cutting them
like a saw and
maintained its original level. The Alluvial plains of this region, which then were under
the sea, slowly started silting up by finer material brought by river than already deposited.
Due to this, if we dig 15', 20' or 30' below the ground level, we find sand layers. The top
layers were deposited later on. The top material was brought partly by the river and partly
by inundating rocks of Kohistan.
The geologists, geographers and archaeologists agree that it was not river Indus alone but
possibly Jamuna in late geological times, and some portion of waters of Sutlej, which
flowed through the lower Indus plains. This water passed through the river called Nara or
Hakra and was flowing through the lower Indus plains, as late as thirteenth century.
During this epoch, the Kohistan hills took the shape which belongs to different geological
periods. These rocks are classified as under:-
(b) ari Gray sand stone: Which extend from Nari river to Laki range,
upper Baran river and lower portions of ground from Thano Bula Khan to
Junghshahi.
(iii) Khirthar Range white lime stone:— Found along the main axis of Khirthar
and Laki ranges. The shally layers at Meting and Jherruck belong to this class.
Makli, Pir-Patho and Aban Shah hills, also belong to the same class.
Thus it will be seen that the entire area is covered with rocks of different classes
belonging to different geological periods.
Lime stones contain calcium salts soluble in water, and therefore they usually
contain brackish water, unless their cracks and fissures are big enough to allow quick
passage of water through them or the lime stone is pure and not impregnated with salts
and does not decompose fast. Basalt usually gives fresh water supply and is not soluble in
water. The sand stones being porous, will normally hold water, and in Kohistan area
sweet water is mostly associated with sand stones.
The Khirthar range in its upper portions, being made of lime stone, contains
brackish water, except in a narrow strip of Nari range in Kambar and Kakar Talukas. In
its central portions i.e., around western Johi, the Khirthar rocks themselves contain
brackish water, but down in the valley, along the Nari Series, the water is sweet partly
because the river Gaj is traversing its whole length, and partly because down below lie
sand stones. The Agriculture department has installed some tube-wells in this latter area
at Wahi Pandhi and Thano Bala Khan and have found sweet water.
Below Manchhar, the rocks run in parallel ridges which, at places, are 25 miles
apart. The valley is made of either Nari or Manchhar sand-stones. This area is also
traversed by a number of ais namely, Naing, Baran, Suk, Mari, Mol, Sari, Kalu and
upper reaches of Malir. These rainfed rivers are responsible for seepage of some water in
the ground, adding to the water table. In this zone, as indicated in Maps No. I and 7,
chances of getting sweet water are quite bright. The prospects are further explained in
connection with Thatta, Dadu, and Larkana districts.
(a) Old Alluvial, which is in general on the west of the bed of Western Nara. Though the
silt from Indus is responsible for its formation, the denudating Khirthar rocks are also a
contributory factor to this alluvial.
(b) Sub-recent formations, about 200,000 to 400,000 years old, which are somewhat
younger than the formation. (i) In general, the area above Hyderabad is of sub-recent
formation.
(c) Recent formations, not more than 100,000 years old, and which have emerged from
shallow sea (possibly Rann of Kuchh) very recently, and some parts below the line
connecting Thatta, Badin and Gujo as late as last 5000 years. The rivers responsible for
the formations are Indus, since geological times; Jamuna, till recent geological times; and
Sutlej with whole of its volume till pre-historic times and partially till 13th century.
The rivers bring silt with them, which is partly deposited in their bed and the
sides, and the rest is discharged into the sea at the delta, where it slowly raises the sea
bed, emerging new land. The silt carried by river Indus in the high flood of about 100
days is calculated as 6%. The silt slowly raises the valley and the river starts moving on
the ridge. Once the ridge is formed, unless controlled artificially, the river moves off the
ridge, forming another ridge and so on, raising the general level of the country. The river
Indus has changed its course from one end of plains to the other throughout the ages, and
at none of the times has it kept the same course for very long.
A study of contours of the plains will clearly indicate the courses the river has
taken through the ages. Flying over the valley one can easily see the winding courses of
the old beds. The excavations at Mohenjo-Daro have clearly indicated a surface rise of 13
ft. in 5000 years i.e. approximately 7" per century. The rise near the river bed is much
more, say 12" per century, and further away from it, it is much less.
Water from the rivers seeps into the ground in the arid zones and accumulates
there for long times. The movement of the ground water under natural conditions is very
slow, depending on permeability of the ground. It could be as low as 3' per year. A few
hundred feet per annum may be considered as a good average. Under natural conditions
in medium and fine sand stratas as we have, and with such a poor drainability, the water
This stream flowed sometimes as one branch and at other times as two branches.
The western-most branch flowed to Manchhar through Sind Hollow starting from Ghari
Khairo, and the other ran its course close to the present Western Nara (abandoned in
1932, after Sukkur Barrage), which also ended in Manchhar. From there, the two
offshoots re-discharged their water in the Indus via Aral canal. These branches of the
river, whose position at different historical times has been explained in chapters IV and
V, were responsible for seepage of water in the ground. Unfortunately, both Eastern and
Western Naras were non-perennial, particularly the former, which in historic times was
carrying spill waters of Indus and Sutiej. They also did not carry very big volumes of
water as the main river, Another unfortunate factor was that they passed through the
alluvial which contained calcareous materials, with the result that their diluting effect on
the ground water below was not adequate, and in the dry season, when they partly acted
as seepage channels, they were rather draining their original water. The Eastern Nara had
practically ceased to flow even in the inundation season for nearly 600 years since its
drying up in 1226. Only in 1859 it was converted into a perennial canal. The Western
Nara and least kept flowing till 1932. It was a branch used for navigation in the
inundation se son as late as 1840.
From the above data, it is obvious that one could look, with a reasonable amount
of confidence, for sweet water along the Indus and both the Eastern and Western Maras.
And, nearly 800 test bores carried out in the defined areas during the last 5 years have
definitely strengthened the theory that along old beds of old rivers sweet water could be
located. The matter is discussed in details in subsequent chapters. However, it may here
be affirmed that: -
(i) On the left bank of the river, from Ubauro upto Miani forest, in a width of
about 20 miles (With a few exceptions for which there are special reasons),
ground water upto the depth of 200' or even more at many places, is fit for
cultivation.
(ii) On the right bark of river Indus, from Kandhkot upto Sehwan, water is sweet
in depth varying from 125' to 200', in a width of even 25 miles north of Sukkur,
and to a width of only 10 miles in Dada district.
The reason for this variation on the left and the right bank is that the river has
really not westerned much beyond the present location in historical times at least
(iii) Along the ridge of Western Nara, which perhaps was always non-perennial,
water is sweet only in depth of 30' to 70' and to the width of a few miles on either
side.
(iv) In the case of Eastern Nara, whose bed was denied water by the river 700
years back, sweet water can be located only in a thin strip of about one or two
miles, on either side, to a very shallow depth and perhaps not more than 70' at
some isolated places only.
On the basis of the test bores carried out, a ground water map has been prepared
(see Map I). This happens to coincide, except in a few points, with the old beds of river
Indus and its branches. The total area in the Alluvial plains, where water is fit for deep
tube wells (125' and above) will roughly be 6000 sq. miles.
The chapter that follows deals with the details relating to the changing beds of
river Indus and its branches, in the region.
It would thus be clear that sweet water in the region is mainly the outcome of
seepage from the river and its branches, in the historic times.
1. The search for old beds of River Indus based on historical and scientific lines
started when General Cunningham, Director Archaeological Survey of India, started
following the route of the traveller Hiun Tsiang (Yuan Chwang) of 7th century A.D. His
search resulted in the location of a large number of Buddhist stupas. He produced a map
of old course of river Indus & its tributaries 1871. He thought that Eastern Nara was the
bed of river Indus. His predecessors like Mcmurdo, Burnes and Pottinger, who had
visited this area before the British conquest, were of the same opinion, though J.G. Fife,
the Superintending Engineer then, who surveyed Eastern Nara in the mid-fifties of last
century, thought that it was merely a spill channel fed by Indus.
2. In 1874, C.F. Oldham of Survey of India wrote in Calcutta Review (Vol. CXII)
that Sutlej was discharging in the bed of Eastern Nara, and continued to do so till about
the first quarter of 13th century, and that the Eastern Nara was not the bed of river Indus.
3. Another anonymous writer, preferring for himself the name of Nearchus (the
name of Alexander's General who had written details of his voyage), stated (Calcutta
Review Vol. LX, 1875) that Sutlej never flowed into Hakra or Nara, but flowed
westwards directly into Indus. It was Jamuna instead that once flowed westwards and fed
Hakra . He supported the view that east of Rohr', Indus passed through the bed of Nara.
4. In 1887 A.D., Oldham of Geological Survey of India, who was familiar with
behavior of rivers and hydrology, said that Indus could not have flowed into Eastern Nara
at all. It was Jamuna in recent geological times' and Sutlej later on, that fed Eastern Nara.
5. On this topic, Raverty wrote "Mehran of Sind and its Tributaries" in the Journal
of Asiatic Society of Bengal-1892, which ran into 350 pages. His theory was that Eastern
Nara or Hakra was the main river in which Sutlej and other Ambala streams were
discharging in Eastern Punjab area, and Indus too, carrying the combined waters of
Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi and Beas discharged in it, below present Khanpur (in Bahawalpur
division) at the time of Arab conquest. He names the Eastern Nara as Mehran and calls
the Indus as its tributary. He supported his theories with historical references, and
indicated the position of rivers in this region at six different periods.
Though his theory is completely incorrect, the information and historical evidence
collected by him has been most useful to future writers of historical-geography, history
and archaeology of the region.
Though the course traced by him about Alexander's route, today stands
completely superseded, the rest of his chapters give valuable information, and his map of
delta country, except in a few particulars, remains unmatched.
According to his map, the river Indus, at the time of Arab conquest, passed
between the following modern towns: To the West—Kandiaro, Tharushah, Naushahro,
Nurpur, Tando Adam, Shahdadpur, Thul-Mir-Rukhan (14 miles south-west of Bandhi
Railway station and 8 miles south-east of Daulatpur), and towards its east were Pad-idan
and Kot-Lalu. The towns of Kingri (in Khairpur district) and Sakrand were just on the
river.
9. In 1932, Mr. Whitehead in an article printed in the Indian Antiquary (Vol. LXI-
1932), concluded, on the basis of hydrological data of the Punjab rivers, that river like
Sutlej could not have oscillated 70-80 miles. According to him, Hakra or Nara dried up
due to diminished rainfall in the Punjab and consequent loss of Ambala streams. He
located a large number of ruins of old towns on the bed of this river extending almost to
Delhi.
10. Sir Aurel Stein of Archaeological Department in his article (in 1942), after
study of a number of sites in Bikanir and Ambala, came out with a theory that the mighty
Ghaghar or Hakra at one time carried combined waters of a number of streams including
11. From the study of Sir Aurel Stein and Whitehead's theory, it can be concluded
that Hakra was the original bed of River Jamuna in recent geological times, and later on,
it was being supplied by rain-fed streams (or small rivers) like Ghaghar, Thangri,
Saraswati, Drishad,Wadi, Wahund or Rainee and Markanda. The spill water from Sutlej
also supplied water to Hakra every season and so did the Indus from Panjnad to Bakhar.
Its drying up could be attributed to decline in rain fall, which definitely was caused by
excessive deforestation in Bikanir and Ambala and also due to un-controlled grazing.
There is even evidence of a rainfed stream from Jaisalmir joining eastern Nara
near Khipro. Several dhands in Khipro Taluka are proof of this. It is also certain that
Indus had never flowed through the bed of Nara, and if it had done, the river could not
have westerned without silting up the low line through which Hakra passes.
On the basis of available research the following paragraphs may finally be laid
down on this highly absorbing subject of the bed of river Indus as it must have been in
the historical times.
It is impossible to trace out the pre-historic location of river Indus, but it would
suffice to say that Indus flooded Mohenjo-Daro at least three times if not more, and so
was the case with Naru Daro and Chhanhi-jo-Daro.
12. The Indus passed north-west of Sukkur close to Ghauspur, north of Shikarpur,
and down south to Ruk. It then crossed the present course of river and was practically
running parallel to it at a distance of about 18-20 miles east of it, till it reached Patala the
then capital of Sind, a place in southern Nawabshah Taluka, but not much to the east of
Shahdadpur, where delta head started. Here, one branch turned south-east and the other
southwest. The former ended in the sea possibly by present Western Duran, and the
western branch again bifurcated into two near present Tando Mohammad Khan—one
branch going down south, and the other to the west, above Makli hills, into the sea. The
hill on which Gujo stands was probably close to the sea coast. The hills eleven miles
south of Pir Patho, now on left bank, and called Aban Shah hills, were an island in the sea
where Alexander had landed. These hills are now 75' above the surrounding land and 1½
miles long.
There was a channel of the western branch of Indus, which is described as course
No. I of the western branch of river Indus in the next chapter. This channel certainly
issued somewhere in Jacobabad district and went down to Shikarpur, where it took
southern course to Ghari Yasin, Mirokhan, Mahota and Warah etc., and finally to
Manchar, wherefrom it made a loop south-east to meet the main channel mid-way
between Sehwan and Patala. The loop channel must have been Aral.
13. Ptolemy, a geographer, who came to India about 150 A.D., wrote about two
branches of Indus: one which passed below Kashmore, probably near Ghauspur, then
south of Jacobabad and near Garhi Khairo and ended in the western depression or Sind
Hollow, which drained to Manchhar lake. This branch also got water from flood streams
of the Bolan river of Baluchistan.
The other stream also took off from Indus, west towards Arbita (Khirthar)
mountains. This might have been the Western Nara or Ghar. One of these streams, by
which he probably meant Western Nara, joined the main river above Patala, the then Sind
capital. This must have been via Aral below Sehwan.
14. In the upper reaches, there was not much change since Ptolemy's visit, except
that the river had westerned somewhat, and was closer by another couple of miles. In 632
A.D., the river passed near Dahiyat (Dehat) 17 miles east of present course. Chach
crossed the river near this place to suppress at revolt. The place is situated on northern
border of Kandiaro taluka and the old bed is visible here. Below Bahmanabad .(possibly
old Patala), it bifurcated into two branches, the south-east branch met the Eastern Nara
just below Naukot and the western branch flowed to Debal. The Eastern Nara continued
to flow possibly as a non-perennial river.
The western branch (Western Nara) is not mentioned, but cannot have been non-
existent because important Buddhist stupas existed near Badah and Dhamraho which
must have been on it. Sehwan also survived, which could depend, for its water and food
supplies, on this branch.
15. For this period, I believe Henry Cousens' map, with slight modifications,
could give a fair picture.
The Indus then was only a couple of miles west of Mirpur-Mathelo. Further south
above Bakhar, it turned south-west, then headed south passing close to present. Sukkur
on its west, then through Lohano Dhoro which was 5-6 miles west of Kot Deji, 10 miles
west of Kot Lalu, 2-3 miles east of Naushaharo, 3 miles east of Thul Rukan, about 10-20
miles east of Sehwan (at both these places there are abandoned beds of the river), 2 miles
east of Sakrand, and 16 miles east of Nerun or Hyderabad. Hala was on the west of the
river. The water for Nerun (Hyderabad) came by a channel in the inundation season and
was possibly stored in some lake or depression, as the ground water was brackish around
Hyderabad. The general course of the river was about 17 miles east of its present course
in Kandiaro Taluka, as in previous century. Mansura built on the site of Bahmanabad is
in line with the Lohano Dhoro.
The third and western branch taking off below the level of Matli from the central
stream, had Debal on it. One branch (or a delta mouth ) of the river passed through Deh
Bukerani or Kakar Bukera, which, according to "Chach Nama" was assigned to a certain
chief for his maintenance, by Governor of Debal. This bed is still traceable through that
Deh.
It appears from Arab writings that the main stream of Indus flowed through Aror
(Alore) by about 950 A.D. The Aror gap through which the Nara canal passes is just too
small to allow the large volume of river water to pass through it. It was either a small
spill-channel of the river or a stream but not the river Indus, which was then flowing
north-west of Sukkur. This channel seems to have deserted Alore by about 950 A.D.
One important change that seems to have occurred during this period was
destruction of Bahmanabad, (probably due to an earthquake according to Henry
Cousens), and Mansura a new capital was built on its site in the year of 734-735 A.D.,
named after the abasside Khalif Mansur.
16. As stated in the introduction of the book, it is difficult to rely upon the Arab
maps and the location of towns etc. mentioned by these writers. Al-lstakhri (951 A.D.)
and Ibn Haukal (960 A.D.) were the two Arab geographers who wrote in the 2nd half of
the 10th century. From their writings quoted by various authors with their own
interpretations, it appears that Indus was flowing north west of Sukkur, where it made a
loop south-east to Lohano Doro (about 17 miles east of present channel), but at a place
known as Kalari about 40 miles north of Mansura, the river bifurcated into two branches,
to meet again below Mansura. This channel must have started somewhere opposite
present Moro, made a loop west-wards reaching to the proximity of Sehwan, (though not
less than 7 miles and more than 10 miles close to it) and united with the main stream 12
miles below Mansura where the delta head started. The main south-eastern channel must
have passed .15 miles, or more, south of Umerkot (then Amarkot) into Hakra, which at
that time was flowing as a separate river. From there it passed to the sea via Koree creek.
The western branch passed to Debal which, in Ibn-Haukal's words, in 961 A.D.,
was a confined place, but for the sake of trade, people took their dwellings there. From
this description Bambhore may probably be Debal. It is a small harbour and is congested.
In the upper reaches, the branch of the river, which passed through Alor gap,
possibly silted up leaving the Alor without water, and this town was no longer mentioned
after the 10th century. Hyderabad was on the west of Indus and so was Hala.
The main branch still continued to flow practically through the old course, i.e. it left
between Kashmore and Ghauspur towards north of Shikarpur, then down to Ruk where it
made a turn east-wards, and, after wandering in Khairpur District, passed into Lohano
Dhoro. Still another western branch took off from it, passed near Jagan between
Shikarpur and Jacobabad and reached Sind Hollow near Ghari Khairo. (This channel was
later on utilized for what is known as Begari canal now).
17. During 11th century two Arab writers visited Sind, namely Alberuni (937-
1048) and Al-Idrisi. The former had lived in India, and studied Sanskrit. He was
comparatively scientific in his investigations. The latter has been considered a better
geographer than his predecessors of the previous century. From their accounts it appears
that there was not much of a change in the course of the river during the previous two
centuries. According to Al-Beruni, the united waters of Punjab meeting at Panjnad bent
west-wards from the city of Alor (He means between Alor and Kashmore) and were
received in "Nahr-i-Mehran" (through the famous Lohano Dhoro), which flowed through
the midst of the country (as it actually did) and formed a number of islands, till it reached
Mansuriyat (Mansura or Bahmanabad). One such island between Kalari and Mansura was
also described by the geographers lbn-Haukal and Ishtakhri.
The city (Mansura) is situated among two branches of the river. The united waters
reach sea by two branches the first westwards to Lahori Bunder, and the other bends
towards east, in the confines of Kuchh, there called "Sind Sager." Al-ldrisi puts Mansura
on the west of the main branch of Indus. This shows another hydrological change during
this century.
At delta head, the route taken by the eastern branch was probably the same as
taken at the time of Arab conquest (possibly Western Puran), when it met Eastern Nara
some 20 miles south of Naukot. This was the main branch of the river, and was in the
Sumra territory.
The first Sumra capital, Tharri, was on the main branch of the Indus, called the
Western Puran. The ruins of this town are 6 miles south by west of Mohbat Dero in Matli
Taluka. This capital town was built in early 10th century and was abandoned later on, and
a new Sumra capital, Mohd. Tur, was built (probably in 13th century on Gungro branch,
as by that time Indus seems to ha deserted the Western Puran as its main branch.
As regards the Sind Hollow, Al-Idrisi has pointed out that the tract to the west of
Indus i.e. south of present Shahdadkot to Manchar, was full of lakes, depressions and
dhands, In his words he calls it "marshy area in the west (from Kashmore) to Sewistan".
This clearly shows that the western branch was definitely flowing through that area the
same way as it did before, in previous two centuries or later on.
18. The most prominent change in river Indus was its passing through Bakhar
gorge, in the last years of 12th century or early 13th century. How Indus carve to occupy
The western branch (Western Nara or some other channel) continued to flow, but
its volume was definitely reduced, and was probably then only a seasonal channel it
continued down south, and south of Sehwan via Aral joined the main stream. The Aral
definitely took south-eastern direction. The river probably was 10 miles east of its present
course at this point. In 1297-98 A.D., when Sultan Saldae the Moghul invaded Sind,
Sultan Allaud Din's son Nusrat Khan, the ruler of Multan, Uch (Bahawalpur Div.),
Sehwan and Bakhar, took his troops to Sehwan via river. This does not mean that Sehwan
was on the river then. This Sultan either came along the Western course or came up-
stream to Sehwan, via Aral. Mir Masum saw the same river about 6 Kuroh (7 miles) west
of Sehwan in 1585. However, possibility of its being very close to Sehwan also cannot be
ruled out as old Pat and Talti were not on the right bank but on the left bank of river
Indus, in 1541 A.D., at the time of Humayun's flight to Sind, and that being so, the river
could have been closer to Sehwan at least in 1541 A D.
At delta head which no longer was near Mansura the Arab Capital (which was not
heard of since the 2nd decade of 13th century, and in the next century was already in
ruins) but was much down below, the river took two channels, one eastern called Western
Puran, which joined Eastern Nara or Hakra, and another took a western course. The spill
water from Indus did not flow into Hakra or flowed less, and so did Sutlej, resulting at
least in partial drying up of Hakra or Eastern Nara, on which depended prosperity of
south eastern part of this region, the stronghold of Sumras. This resulted in decrease of
their power in that area, as a consequence of which they lost Umerkot to Sodas in 1226
A.D. The Hakra however kept flowing only partially from occasional overspills of Sutlej
and Indus till the 16th century.
Of these two, the western branch took more water than the eastern branch, the
Puran and therefore Sumras shifted their capital from Tharri (onWestern Puran) to
In the last quarter of 12th century, Sultan Jalaluddin Khurasani took over Debal,
sacked it and acquired wealth. The same Sultan took shelter in Debal in 1223 A.D., when
chased by Changiz Khan. Debal is however not heard of, since then. lbn-Battuta who
travelled through this area in 1333-34 A.D., never mentioned it, proving that the river
probably had already deserted it.
From the above it is clear that during this century the river had westwarded more.
It was passing through Bakhar, and was closer to the present course of Indus than in the
previous centuries. The delta head was much below Mansura. Mansura seems to have
decayed in the first half of 13th century. The date is not known but should coincide with
shifting of Sumras' capital from Tharri to Mohammad Tur. This seems to be an important
hydrological change of the century. However Henry Cousens believed that Mansura was
destroyed by Sumras who sacked it. The Sumras may even have sacked Debal which was
no longer heard of, in the next century. The western branches of the river like Ren,
Gungro and Baghar had established themselves, at the cost of Western Puran and new
towns like Fatehbagh, Jun and Lahori, were getting more importance.
The western branch of Indus passing through Sind Hollow, down to Manchar still
survived. Lahori Bunder mentioned by Al-Beruni existed in this century, and was
possibly on Baghar.
19. Some more revolutionary changes seem to have taken place in the course of
Indus during this century.
The river seems to have established its course north of Makli hills, when Samas
built their capital, Samui three miles northwest of present Thatta in years about 1338-40
A.D. Kalri was the main stream then, and Baghar a secondary stream, though definitely
perennial, as Lahori Bunder was on it. The bifurcation now took place 10-12 miles east of
Thatta, which point some years earlier was between Jhok and Bulri, where the beds are
still traceable.
The river along Kalri or Baghar branch had not quite established itself, by cutting
its bed deep enough. Sultan Feroz Shah (1351 A.D.) who attempted to attack Thatta from
Baghar side (south-west), finding the river too wide sent forces up-stream to attack from
Kalri side (northwest), and even here the river was too wide. Kalri remained the main
channel till 1519.
The Ren and Gungro continued to flow. In the early part of this century Samas
seem to have over-thrown the Sumras. The main reason for their loss of power probably
Debal seems to have been deserted by the river by this time for good, and has not
been mentioned by Ibn-Battuta, who visited Lahori Bunder in 1333-34 A.D.
In the central area, the river flowed 16 miles east of Hyderabad near Nasarpur, a
town established under that name by Sultan Feroz Shah, ruler of Delhi in 1350 A.D.
To the north of Bakhar, the Western branch of Indus took off south of Kashmore,
following its usual course to Manchar and met the main stream south-east of Sehwan.
(in 1542 at the time of Humayun's flight from Delhi to Sind and Khan
Khanan's campaign against Mirza Jani Beg Tarkhan in (1590-92).
20. Exact information about the position of Indus during this period is not known.
But it was passing through the Bakhar gorge. Old Pat (now in ruins), where King
Humayun married Hamida Begum, was on the left bank of river Indus and so was Talti
(both towns are now on the right bank). This old bed of the river is still traceable between
west of old Pat and close to new pat a village in Dadu Taluka, about a mile to the west of
the old Pat. This westerning of the river seems to have helped that territory very much
and made it more fertile. As affirmed, by Mir Masum, this country was a mere waste, at
the time when Taluka, about a mile to the west of the old Pat. This waste Sumra country
(south-east Hyderabad and south west Mirpurkhas) was fertile, but by 1621 that part (the
Sumra territory) grew waste and this part (the Pat area) turned fertile instead.
The Indus at this period probably passed close to Sehwan, but after going 10
miles south, made a turn eastwards to Sakrand, and on the way passed near the present
Lakki, Amri, Sann and Manjhand (though at a considerable distance from this place than
is the case now) and Unarpur. Hala was to its east and so was Nasarpur. Hyderabad was
16 miles to the west. At a place 20 miles south-east of Hyderabad above Tando
Mohammad Khan, it divided into two branches: the main branch going westwards, and
the other, a minor branch called Ren (probably non-perennial), due south. The Ren was
converted into Guni channel later on. This branch had the town of Jun on its left bank
(ruins 10 miles northwest of Talhar) and Fatehbagh on its right bank. The latter, also in
ruins, is 5-6 miles northwest of Jun. During his flight from Sher Shah, Humayun wanted
to conquer Sind, and so in 1543 AD., he made his headquarters at Jun, while Shah Hasan
Arghun the ruler of Sind, to stop his crossing the river and capturing boats, made his
headquarters at Fateh bagh. Old Badin (now in ruins) was down south on this same minor
branch. Gungro took off from the western branch at a distance of about 12 miles
southwest of its bifurcation with Ren. The capital town of Sumras, Mohammad Tur and
Mughal-Bhim (Jati) were located on it.
21. One more change took place during the years 1700-1750. Sattah and Shah
Bunder branches, took off from Baghar stream. The latter had already become the main
stream since 1519 A.D.
22. In 1758, the river changed its course near Hala and started flowing west of
Hyderabad. There were hydrological changes between 1755-59 causing flooding and
destruction and consequently the change in the course of river Indus. Due to these
changes, the river abandoned about 100 miles of its old channel. The Ren branch which
also dried up, was another stretch of 70 miles. Due to these floods and hydrological
changes, Muradabad, the capital town, built by Murad Khan Kalhoro in 1756-57 near
Nasarpur, was also erroded. After the river established west of Hyderabad, Ghulam Shah
Kalhoro started his ambitious programme of canals and irrigation works, and also built
his new capital at Hyderabad in 1770 A.D.
A branch of Indus, taking off from Moro and reaching Puran, was irrigating rice
fields of Kuchh. This was permanently dammed in 1762-63 A.D. Alexander Burnes who
was East India Company's envoy to Kuchh, and had visited Sind in 1831, has attributed
this to Ghulam Shah's taking revenge from Kuchhees, at whose hands he lost a battle,
some years earlier. The same ruler had also dammed a spill-channel from Indus to
Eastern Nara about 8 miles south-west of Yaru Lund in Rohri Sub-Division. This bund
mentioned in the saint-poet Grohi's prediction was constructed, four centuries after the
said writing of these verses. According to legend It is connected with the story of Saiful
Muluk a rich merchant, whose beautiful maiden Badi-ul Jamal caught the fancy of Dilu
Rai, the tyrant ruler of the time, who wanted some how to possess her. Saif-ul Muluk,
however, got three days grace from the king, constructed the bund diverted the water
down the main channel, and safely sailed away, with his wealth and the maiden. Dilu
Rai's country also became a desert. This of course is only one of those stories attributed
to the legend of Dilu Rai.
How hard this change in the course of the river must have been to the people, is
quite clear from the fact that thereafter there was continuous political unrest, decline in
agricultural production, trade, and small industry. The economists like Chhablani blame
Ghulam Shah Kalhora and his successors for it, but the real cause was that Lacs of acres
of land (which are now being reclaimed by the G.M. Barrage after two centuries) went
out of production due to this abrupt change in the course of the river, crusting the
economy of the country.
23. Due to silting up, Kairi branch of the river dried up between 1779 and 1780
A.D. It was converted into a canal in 1859. In 1820 the Baghar which until 1809, at the
time of Pottinger's visit was the main outlet to sea, also silted up. It was also converted
into a canal in 1884.
In 1859, the Eastern Nara was converted into a perennial canal by Fife the then
Superintending Engineer. Thus it again started irrigating for the first time since it dried
up completely or was left as an un-important spill-channel after 1226 A.D.
The Western Nara, which existed at the time of Alexander's invasion and even
before, had its head near Kashmore in pre-historic time and near Ghauspur later. Due to
westerning of Indus, however, its head was 20 miles north of Larkana by 1860 and only 8
miles north of the same in 1902, when it was converted into a canal. This was the oldest
channel of the river, and Sehwan, the oldest town in the region situated on a low rocky
hill depended on it for its water supply. The river and its floods never destroyed this
town. There is a large number of ruined towns on the banks of Western Nava—Stupas at
Mohen-jo-Daro and Dhamraho, and ruins of Fatehpur and Khudaabad being the most
important ones.
Ghar, an old branch of Indus, through which water discharged in the depression to
the west , was converted into a channel by Kalhoras. It kept serving the area till Sukkur
Barrage took over in 1932.
Phulleli canal started 10 miles north of Hyderabad in the 18th century and it
ended near Tando Mohammad Khan in the old bed of river called Ren, on the banks of
which at one time Humayun and Shah Hassan were watching each other's movements in
the 16th century, and which was still flowing upto 1758. The upper reaches of it were
called Phulleli, and the lower reaches, Guni, Gungro, a bed of river in the 13th and 14th
century, was also converted into a canal.
The above courses of Indus have been shown in the various district maps.
These maps also show the sweet ground water zones. It can easily be seen that in
the area where the river has flowed in the historic times, the water is sweet, but along its
pre-historic courses the quality of water has changed and is no longer fit for irrigation.
COURSE O. 1.
COURSE O. 2
It starts near Murho Mari opposite to Karampur, and follows the present bed of
Begari Canal, but leaving it at Khanpur, it makes north-westernly bend, and after passing
north of Shikarpur, makes south-western turn to Waris-Dino Machhi, the junction of
Jacobabad Larkana and Sukkur districts. At this point, it makes more south-westernly
turn, and passing between Shahdadkot and Miro Khan, leads into Sind-Hollow near Garhi
Khair Mohammad (not Ghari Khairo). The exact date of this course is not known, which,
however, may have been the 9th and 10th century A.D.
COURSE O. 3
It starts near Ghauspur, then passing through Mirpur it makes slight north-west
bend, and passes near Abad about 10 miles south of Jacobabad. Here it makes
southwestern turn to Ghari Khairo, from where it passes straight down to Shahdadkot and
then to Sind Hollow. This may have been at Ptolemy's times. Ptolemy has also described
It is interesting to note that from Gauspur to Mirpur, the Nasir branch has been
aligned on this bed; and from Abad to Ghari Khairo, the present Began has been aligned
on the same bed.
COURSE O. 4
It starts opposite to Bakhar but at a point about 14 miles west of it, goes to
Drakhan, and from there, moves south-west to Ghari Khair Mohammad into Sind
Hollow. This must have been prior to Indus passing through Bakhar gorge, when Indus
was 14 miles west of Bakhar.
COURSE O. 5
It starts south of Larkana, passing near Bakrani, Dokri, Sehar, Radhan and
Balishah, wherefrom it moves direct south to Pat.
Part of the course is along the present rice canal alignment (Dokri to Radhan) and
part along the alignment of Dadu canal (Bali Shah to Pat).
These courses have from time to time formed western branch of Indus and were
navigable. The exact date of flow of each of the course is very difficult to determine, but
it seems likely that the first course is pre-historic and was there also at the time of
Alexander's conquest when the Indus was passing north of Shikarpur, and then flowed
south-east, crossing the present river bed into Lohano Dhoro. The famous pre-historic
site, Limo-jo-Daro, must have been on this course.
The 2nd, 3rd and 4th courses might have come up at different times during the
period of about 1000 years after Alexander's conquest. Ibn-Buttuta must have passed
along one of these courses to Sehwan. The 5th course seems either independent of these
or may have been a branch of them possibly since 3000 B.C., as important pre-historic
sites like Mohenjo-Daro; Jhunkar, Dhamraho-jo-Daro, Lonam-jo-Daro, and Mahota (6
miles north of Larkana) must have flourished on it between 3000 B.C. to the 6th century
A.D.
The Western Nara, Ghar, Dadu Canal, Rice Canal, Desert Canal, Begar Wah, and
Nasir Wah are on the alignments of the 5 western courses discussed above.
The Sind Hollow was frequented by floods. The elderly people, of Dadu and
Larkana districts always talked about floods from Kashmore. They specially remembered
the flood of 1874, after which construction of a bond from Begari to Kashmore was
started and completed in 1879. The last two of these floods came in 1942 and 1948. The
path of 1942 flood which started south of course number 3 at a distance of a few miles,
Though contours of the area do not show it but the presence of sweet water in
Kandhkot Taluka to greater depth & brackish water to the eastern sides in Kashmore
Taluka adjoining to the present course of Indus, clearly shows that these waters (in
Kandhkot Taluka) must have been diluted by the river Indus which at least in prehistoric
times, may have flowed through this area in the neighbourhood of Risaldar, west of
Kandhkot and Haibat, near Ghauspur, and Shikarpur where it make a southeastern turn to
Khairpur state and then to Lohano-Dhoro. There could be no other reason for a wide
sweet water belt in the centre of Jacobabad district away from the river, but this. Western
Nara must have been a branch of the river, since then.
SUKKUR DISTRICT
(i) Vinjrot in Sukkur district, 5 miles east of Red Railway station on Hakra.
(ii) Dribh Dethari about 20 miles south of the former near Hakra.
(iii) Alor (or Aror) flourished on a small eastern branch of river Indus, which
passed through Aror gap upto mid 10th century. Water being brackish in the area,
the town was deserted in the 10th century.
(iv) Bakhar was established in the early 13th century when Indus passed through
its gorge. Ground water being brackish, the triple towns, Rohri, Sukkur and
Bakhar, got established only after the Indus passed through this gorge.
KHAIRPUR DISTRICT
Old towns namely Kasur, Kot Deji, De-jji-Tokn exist near the old river bed in
which Indus was discharging, after making a loop round Ghauspur, Shikarpur and then
crossing the present course south of Sukkur. With change In the course of the river, the
towns were reduced to ruins.
AWABSHAH DISTRICT
Thul Mir Rukan is an old bed of River Indus possibly the Lohano Dhoro; so is
chanhu-jo-Daro, which is about 1/2 mile south of modern village of Jamal Kerio near
Sakrand. The river is 12 miles west of it now, but in the 3rd millennium B.C. the river
flowed near it and more than once caused its destruction.
SAGHAR DISTRICT
Deper Gangro, another place a few miles north, by east of Bahmanabad, was on a
pre-historic course of the river, and when the river changed to a new course about 7 miles
west, it probably continued getting its water supply by some channel. Being in brackish
water zone, its survival otherwise was out of question.
THARPARKAR DISTRIC
aukot, another Buddhist site, was on the Eastern Nara, and so was Nohto on the
east of Puran above Allah Bund. The water in the whole district is brackish (except in
small pockets), and therefore the old settlements perished as soon as deserted by the
rivers.
HYDERABAD DISTRICT
asurpur was founded in the 14th century on the river Indus. Nerun (Hyderabad),
16 miles west of Nasarpur, was getting water by a canal.
Suden-jo-Daro was also on an old bed of river Indus at the junction of Guni and
Phulleli. Places like Tharri, Jun, Fatehbagh, Mohammad Tur, Old Badin, and Bulri on
Renn and Gungro have been described in Chapter IX. Their rise and decline went with
the change in the course of the river. Since water in lower Hyderabad district was
brackish, all old settlements were deserted as soon as the river deserted them.
DADU DISTRICT
Leaving aside the sites in the Kohistan hills, which are described in Chapter IX,
Amri is an important prehistoric site. The river is close by it now, but, in the olden days,
it was a great distance away from this settlement; which instead was situated then on the
Aral canal, the western branch of Indus. Water being brackish all around, this pre-historic
site could not have survived as long as it did, without Aral being close to it.
THATTA DISTRICT
Bhambore, a small harbour which possibly existed from 7th to 14th century, was
on river Indus. Its brick lined wells now giving brackish water must have been sweet
then.
Helai (now Hilaya point), 16 miles N.E. of Thatta was on some old channel,
(possibly the channel on which Debal stood).
Lahori Bunder, established in early 11th century, existed till the river changed its
course in 1758.
LARKAA DISTRICT
Another Buddhist stupa near Dhamraho must also have been on the western Nara
and is located in the sweet water zone. Mahota on Ghar channel or possibly on old Nara
must have been a place of great importance in former times.
JACOBABAD DISTRICT
Lime jo-Daro, is an old site near Ghari Khairo. The ground water at Ghari Khairo
is sweet to a depth of about 150' or more. In historic times, the western branch of river
Indus has passed from Kashmore to Kandh Kot, south of Jacobabad to Ghari Khairo and
then into Sind Hollow. The drainage waters of Bolan ai from Baluchistan hills also
passed near this place into Sind Hollow. This is an isolated place which has sweet water
to a great depth, though in the surrounding area water is almost brackish.
Once it is proved that sweet water exists in areas where the river, particularly its
main channel, has flowed for centuries, an, immediate question arises that, if this water is
pumped out, will brackish water from the sides, both to the right and to the left, not rush
in? To answer this question, let us examine what actually has since happened to most of
these beds of the river.
FIG. NO. 1
Principal of seepage of water from canals, streams and rivers to ground which raises
water table and also dilutes the brackish water down below.
Figure (a) showing how some canals and rivers act as drainage channel when
water level in them is low and in case of (b) from the some canals or rivers, seepage
takes place to surrounding areas. The river Indus and non-perrertial canals of Guddu,
Sukkur and G.M. Barrage act as drainage channels in winter while they are responsible
for seepage in the inundation season.
We have seen that in the case of Jacobabad & Sukkur Districts, the old beds of
western stream of the river have been converted into the desert canal, Nasir wah and
Begari Canal. These three canals have flowed in the past, and will continue to flow as a
part of Guddu Barrage irrigation system in the future.
In the case of Larkana and Dadu districts, the easternmost bed of western course
of river Indus (course No. 5, Chapter V) is taken over by the Rice Canal and Dadu Canal.
A part of the old channel was converted into Ghar Wah by Kalhoras about 250 years
back. They also constructed Dato Wah from Larkana to Shahdadkot along an old
alignment. The old bed of western Nara below Radhan, forms a part of Rice Canal
system. Aral still continues to flow as it did 5000 years back, practically for 6 months.
The canals Dato-ji-Kar (20 miles) and Shah-jo-Kar (20 miles) were absorbed in the
Warah branch.
The Sind Hollow, where water is brackish except in a part of Khairpur Nathan
Shah and western Johi Talukas, still gets water from Bolan ai (of Baluchistan) and
several other ais of this region, though not to the same extent as before. The Manchhar
Lake still fills up in the summer months inspite of its being silted up gradually.
In the case of Khairpur district, we have three old beds of the river Indus. Rohri
Canal lies on the alignment of the central one. The seepage from this canal is so much
that reclamation of the waterlogged lands has become a problem.
Coming down to Nawabshah district, the aulakhi, asrat, Dad and Dambhro
Wahs are on the alignment of an old bed of the river. Nasrat was constructed by Nur
Mohammad Kalhora and Naulakhi (consisting of Murad Beg and Phiroz Wahs) was a
canal in pre-Kalhora days. These canals now form part of the Rohri canal system.
The Eastern Nara was also converted into a perennial canal by Fife in 1859, about
600 years after it dried-up.
The old river beds in G.M. Barrage area were converted into canals like Phuleli,
Guni, Baghar, Kalri, Sattah, Phito and Khante, by Kalhoras, Ta{purs and the British.
The Eastern Puran is now a drain channel casually taking some water, but the
Western Puran carries drainage water most of the year.
The seepage is taking place from all these canals and from the river Indus, and
from the fields fed by them, at a much higher rate than ever before. According to
Chhablani's estimates, the cultivated area in the 16th & 17th century was about 15 lac
acres, rising by mid 18th century to 21 lacs, which again declined to 10 lacs in the early
19th century. The annual cultivation figures in alluvial plains are in the neighbourhood of
65 lac acres now, and are going to reach 85 lacs or more by the end of 1970. Such a vast
irrigation system, more or less constantly submerged in water, would again mean more
and more seepage into the ground.
The water table has already been rising in the whole area. By pumping water from
the ground, we will be increasing storage capacity of the underground reservoir, which in
turn will be fed and replenished by seepage from above. The river is flowing at the ridge,
and ground water has a gradient away from the river water. By pumping the ground
water, we will induce seepage from the river, and therefore there is no fear that the
ground water reservoir will be exhausted by pumping, specially in case of sweet water
zone on both sides of the river.
My opinion is same about the area, where water is sweet to shallow depths in Jacobabad,
Larkana, Dadu, Khairpur and Nawabshah districts.
The Rann has played the most important part in the formation of the whole desert.
According to some geographers and geologists, the Thar desert was formed by sand
blown across the Rann from the sea. Had that really been so, the Rann of Kuchh itself
would have been covered with sand hills first. In the Rann, however, we find deposits
which are of much finer material than the coarse sand found in the desert, and therefore-
the sand blown from the Rann's surface could not have formed the desert.
(i) The water in the Thar desert is not so brackish as that on the west of the desert,
at some places to a distance of even 20 to 30 miles, in alluvial plains.
(ii) In the desert dhands or lakes, some marine bacteria abide, which exist only in
the sea, and therefore, these dhands must have been connected with the sea at
some time even after their formation.
(iii) Salt lakes are common only on western border of the desert, which fact
clearly shows their origin from the sea.
The silting of present Rann started in the recent times by both Hakra and Indus
flowing into it. At the time of Alexander's conquest, according to Greek writers, the Rann
was a shallow sea. When Mahmud Ghaznavi was returning from his march to Somanath,
pursuing a Hindu chief to the islands north-east of Kuchh in 1006 A.D., he was told that
sea waves will wash away his boats. This clearly shows that the Rann of Kuchh was not
dry in the early eleventh century. The town of Pari Nagar, a sea port in Nagarparkar
Taluka, was destroyed in 1226 A.D. This was the year when Hakra dried up near
Umerkot also, clearly showing that the Rann of Kuchh was an arm of the sea, and was
fed by Hakra. Feroze Shah Tughlak crossed the Rann in 1361 AD., when it was dry. His
army on retreat from Sind to Gujrat nearly perished from heat and thirst. According to
It is not possible to lay down exact location of the Rann of Kuchh, but it seems
likely that it extended over the whole area now covered by G.M. Barrage and over the
area commanded by Sukkur Barrage in the Tharparkar District. A projection of it must
have extended upto Rohri or a little further up. In all this area, we should not, therefore,
expect any sweet water for irrigation purposes. Small quantities of water, for domestic
and small scale irrigation purposes could however be located along the banks of old
Hakra or Eastern and Western Purans, to shallow depths of 40' to 50' at isolated spots.
Today the Rann of Kuchh is a dry barren country which turns into swamp after
rains, when waters brought by Luni from the east, Puran from the north, and some stream
of Kuchh from the south fill it up, to the depth of a few feet. The water does not dry till
about November. There is no vegetation in the Rann. It is an abode of wild ass,
occasional deer and constant mirage; Some desert bushes and tamarisk etc. grow in odd
patches near the Thar border.
Underneath the Thar Desert at the depth of about 1000' rock has been located,
out-crops of which appear at Aravalli hills and Nagarparkar. On the top of this rock, lies
the 1000' mass of earth which has continuously blown from the Rann of Kuchh, which, as
described above, extended to the west, south and south-east of the great, Indian desert,
and on Pakistan side upto Rohri. Due to south-west winds, the silt, sand and tiny sea
shells were blown from the Rann, which have formed this mass of earth. The sea shells,
decomposed and formed calcareous grains, which are saline, and are responsible for
brackish water in the desert.
In due course of time, calcareous shells and the sea salts were dissolved and re-
deposited in the form of kankar and saline concentration. In places, sand became
cemented giving rise to soft sand-stone. The soft sand-stone and kankar are scattered in
the whole desert, and are encountered at various depths, while drilling or digging. Being
impervious, they hold water above them, known as "perched" or "trapped" water. This
water will obviously be some-what brackish, depending upon contact with kankar etc.
The actual ground water lies much below this, possibly 500'-1000' deep.
In this area, no wells have been sunk below 300' and therefore nothing could be
said about the quality and quantity of its ground water. At Gadra Road Railway Station,
The fig. shows cup-shaped bowl made of impervious clayey material of calcareous origin,
met in Thar and Pat areas. It holds small quantities of water above it. The real water
table lies at much lower depth. Almost all wells in Thar area are in perched water.
The Parkar part of Nagarparkar area is altogether different from the rest of the Thar
desert. From the pattern of ground water in this area, it seems certain that at one time
river Luni was flowing across the peninsula between Virawah, and Dinsi. Parkar possibly
was an island then.
In Nagarparkar, Southern Mithi and Southern Diplo near the Rann of Kuchh the
water is located in many wells. The figure shows the brackish water of Rann of kuchh on
which sweet water floats. The brackish water is heavier than sweet water by 8½% and
more. The sweet water being lighter floats on brackish water and the height of sweet
The out-crop of the rocks is almost in the centre of this island or peninsula. The
depth of sand clay over it is not so much as in the desert. The sand is porous and absorbs
huge quantities of water. Even the rocks which are pre-Cambrian of Archean & Purana
group, are igneous and not soluble in water. They are impervious but hold water in
fissures and cracks. This water slowly moves under the ground and is available in the
wells. Near these rocks, artesian conditions can be expected. There are no changes of
artesian conditions in the rest of the desert. The appended map No. 12 shows the sweet
and brackish water zones of Parkar area.
PAT AREA
The desert area lying in Khairpur division is called Pat. Its main difference with
the Thar is that vegetation and rain—fall is comparatively less and the Bhits or sand hills
Like Thar, the Pat rests on rocks which lie about 1000' deep.
In Khairpur district, on the west of the Pat, lie Kot-Di-ji hills, which are Eocene
lime stone (Khirthar-hills group). An outcrop of these hills appears near Jaisalmir. Down
below in Hyderabad District near Badin, at the depth of 950', the Standard Vaccum Oil
Co., while drilling for oil, located Khirthar lime stone. This clearly indicates that most of
the Pat area and the western part of Thar is underlain by Khirthar hills, and the eastern
Thar by Pre-Cambrian rocks of Aravalli group.
Up north in Sukkur district, the Pat is geologically of the same formation as the
Desert Zone of Ambala and Bikanir. The depth of alluvial is 1000° or more. The whole
tract is traversed by beds of old Hakra and the spill channels to it from Indus and Sutlej.
The soil lying below the sandy desert, is hard alluvial. The water in the shallow depths is
brackish, but so is the case in similar formations up north in Bikanir area. Deep drilling
upto 1000' or more is necessary to determine if there is any water down below. It may be
mentioned here that Geological Survey of India in 1926, while drilling located substantial
quantities of sweet water on the Indian side of Pat area in Ambala at depth of about
1000'.
JACOBABAD DISTRICT
The map No. 2 gives details of ground water in Jacobabad district. The district has been
divided in four zones of ground-water.
In the southern part of riverine tract, water is sweet upto the depth of
approximately 200' but in the upper reaches near Kashmore, only upto the depth of 30-70'
or so. The southern area is suitable for tube wells or open wells. In the northern area, only
open wells can be installed, There seems to be an extension of some lime-stone sediments
underneath, near the head-works of Guddu Barrage and south of it, which has made the
water brackish in the northern part. The tube wells, 100'-150' deep, can give yield of 1.5
cusecs, and open wells 30' deep and having 40' long filters, about .33 cusec or more in the
riverine areas.
The strip representing sweet water zone, as shown in the map, extends throughout
the width of the district and covers Kandhkot and parts of Thul and Kashmore Talukas.
The water is sweet upto the depths varying between 100'-150' and in some areas
even upto 200'. The sand in water bearing strata is medium grained and can yield high
quantities of water, as compared to other districts of the two divisions. In this zone, tube
wells having 6" diameter and only 100' deep have given discharge of 1.75 cusecs. Open
wells 30' deep with 40' filters can yield 1/3 to 1/2 a cusec of water. Water table varies
between 8 to 12' at the start of inundation season in April.
This belt extends to the west of sweet water zone. Here the water is sweet up to
the depth of 30' to 70'. The area is suitable for open wells. In case water is sweet to the
depth of 60'-70', boring in the open wells is recommended—discharge of .33 to .5 cusec
may be expected, depending on the depth of the well, length of filters and design of the
well. There is also a shallow sweet water zone parallel to the river in Kashmore Taluka
east of the sweet water zone and west of river Indus, where similar results can be
expected.
West of the shallow sweet water zone is "brackish water zone". The origin of
brackish water here is not known. No detailed analysis of salts has been done. The salts
may be the original sea salts or may have resulted from Baluchistan hills.
In the whole of Jacobabad district, water table is very high. The water table at the
time of rice cultivation is just near the surface. In the months of April and May, it falls
down by 7' to 8'. For tube wells, ordinary centrifugal pumps, kept in a few feet deep pit,
are recommended.
SUKKUR DISTRICT
It is appropriate to mention here that in Shikarpur and Sukkur Talukas, the quality
of ground water is very good, and possibly better, with very low salt content than found
anywhere in the whole of Hyderabad and Khairpur divisions. While tracing the courses of
Indus through ages, we have seen that before the river passed through Bakhar gorge in
the early 13th century, its main course tilted somewhere above or below Ghauspur
crossing the present course of river near Ruk, and ending into Lohano Dhoro. We have
(ii) Rohri Sub-Division. Rohri sub-division may be divided into three ground
water zones:
(a) Riverine area.
(b) Alluvial plains.
(c) Desert area.
(b) The detailed survey of alluvial plains was done by the Agriculture Department
in 1960 by drilling a number of test bores. On the basis of this information, a definite
area, containing sweet water at an average depth of 24' to 40', was located, which is
shown in map No. 3. The quality of water is good, and sweet water extends upto a depth
of 200' and even more. A few tube wells and a large number of open wells already exist
in the area.
This area had the eastern Nara or Hakra or Rainee to the east and Indus to the
west. Eastern Nara was getting water from Jamuna in recent geological times. At times
Sutlej also contributed its spill-water to it. Regular over-spills have also flowed from
Indus into Hakra in Rohri sub-division as well as in Bahawalpur area over a distance of
120 miles. Some spill-channels are still traceable from Indus to Hakra, two of which are
shown in map No. 3. Due to such a long and widespread spilling of water over the area
and seepage from the Indus, the tract holds considerable quantities of sweet ground
water.
Incidentally 90% of this area will soon be irrigated by Guddu Barrage, but the
water supply will only be seasonal. The area, therefore, is most suitable for tube well
irrigation to increase intensities and to grow Rabi crops.
(c) No survey of desert area of this district called Pat has been done. In the desert,
there are old beds of Hakra (or the Eastern Nara river), which dried up in 1226 A.D. But
the chances of getting sweet water in the upper strata are limited. Below the sands at
depth of 1000' or so lie the rocks. Since the Hakra had flowed over the desert sands for
centuries, there are, however, possibilities of water having seeped down and accumulated
over the rocks. Deep drilling may give clue to this. There are shallow wells in the area,
but water in these wells is mostly brackish. Geological survey of India carried out deep
boring (1012') in 1925-26 in Ambala district, and found sweet water at great depth.
Geological formation of this part of Pat is closely connected with Ambala formations.
Test boring to the rock level may therefore be worth while in the area.
LARKAA DISTRICT
From the view point of ground water, Larkana District could be divided into five
zones: (refer map No. 4).
(a) Riverine area, where the conditions are the same as in the Riverine areas of
Sukkur District, described above. Similar wells and tube wells are recommended here.
The water table in this area never falls below 8'.
(b) Sweet water zone, similar to one described in the case of Jacobabad district.
The sand in certain places is slightly finer than that in Jacobabad district. Practically the
same discharge of water can be expected by going slightly deeper in this area. Water is
(c) Shallow sweet water zone, where conditions are the same as in the
corresponding zone in Jacobabad district similar types of open wells are recommended
for this area too.
(d) Brackish water zone, similar to that in Jacobabad district. It also _formed
under the similar circumstances here.
(e) Hilly tract, which consists of calcareous white lime-stone formations. The
chances of getting sweet water in this tract are almost negligible, except in a narrow strip
of sand-stone, known as ari series. There is a number of rain fed rivers, like Sain,
Khenji and Mazrani, which drain rain water from the hills. Some possibility of sweet
water in the bed of these rivers could be investigated. However, even if there is no ground
water in the bed of these rivers, the water carried by them could be utilized by spreading
it for sailabi type cultivation. This type of cultivation to a limited extent is already being
practised on these ais. There are plateaux near Kute-ji Kabar and Daryaro in this tract,
where some tilting is being done.
KHAIRPUR DISTRICT
Broadly speaking, this district has five ground water zones (refer map No. 5).
(a) Hilly tract: The hills in Khairpur district are extention of Eocene series of
Khirthar hills, which start 3 miles north-west of Sukkur and reach 40 miles southeast-
wards in this district, with maximum width of 15 miles. The Bakhar hills are a part of the
same series. This lime-stone is in decomposed state, and the rain-water while passing
through these rocks carries salts, which drain to the plains all around making water in
The west of Khairpur District was the area, through which the river wandered for
centuries. After making a turn-around north-west of Rorhi-Sukkur hills, it went as far east
as Kot-Diji hills. Three courses of the river are shown in map No. 5, two of which belong
to recent historical times. The quality of water therefore should normally be good
throughout the area, but as the Kot-Diji lime-stone hills have been draining brackish
water westward. The above is the case only west of present Rohrl canal which is on the
alignment of the central course of river Indus on the famous Lohano-Dhoro.
(b) Riverine areas, where sweet water exists upto the depth of 250' or more. Open
wells and tube wells in these areas will give the same discharge and are recommended on
the same pattern as In the case of Jacobabad district.
(c) Sweet water zone. In this zone, sweet water exists upto 250' or more. The area
is suitable for tube wells and open wells on the same lines as in Jacobabad district.
(d) Shallow sweet water zone, which has the sweet water zone to the west, fringes
of desert to the east, and Kot-Diji hills to the north-east. Open wells 30' deep are
recommended for this zone. They should be fitted with filters upto 60' or 70', depending
on availability of sweet water. Discharge of about 1/3rd of a cosec may well be expected
from these wells.
(e) Desert Zone. Here the water is mostly brackish at least in the upper strata.
There is some chance of getting sweet water from wells close to the Eastern Nara, but it
will be more economical to pump water from, Nara for irrigation rather than putting in
the wells, at this stage. A time is however going to come when the barrage authorities
will no longer allow pumping from Nara. At that stage, wells will have to be put in. The
desert zone is covered with a large number of lakes which are either saltish or alkaline.
Since these lakes are bye-products of ground water, they are briefly described in the
following paragraphs:—
It has already been explained that the Thar in Hyderabad and Khairpur divisions
is formed by sand, silt, salts, and fine sea shells, blowing from Rann of Kuchh, which
extended as far as Rohri in the recent geological times. In Tharparkar district due to high
wind velocities, the sand hills, which are some times 300' high, lie south-west to north-
east along the direction of wind. In southern Khaiprur, where wind velocity decreases, the
direction of sand hills changes slightly and becomes south-southwest to north-north-east.
In northern Khairpur and Sukkur districts, the sand hills lie south-north. The sand hills of
Khairpur are not so high as those of Thar. Among the sand hills there are, at places, lakes
or dhands, which are formed by rain water seeping down the sand mounds. In the
neighbour-hood of Nara, there is also seepage from the canal into these lakes. The rain
water percolates down the sand, where it is held by impervious clay which lies under the
In the desert area of Khairpur district, normally similar ground water conditions,
should be expected, as in the desert area of Sukkur district. The deep drilling can give
clear indication if there is water at the lower depths in the area.
AWABSHAH DISTRICT
Nawabshah district has been the main stage of activities of the Indus through the
ages. Since Alexander's time, it has westerned at least about 18 miles. The famous
Lohano-Dhoro is situated in this district, which runs through the length of Naushahro
Taluka in the form of either a deep continuous bed of sand or low tract. Along the
western edge of Nawabshah and Shahdadpur (district Sanghar). Talukas runs a belt of
dhoras, ravines and mounds, marking the old beds of river Indus. Beds of the river are
traceable near Daulatpur and Sakrand too.
The settlers of this district since pre-historic times must have suffered the ravages
of Indus. But today when we are facing shortage of water, Nawabshah district can reap
the harvest of water left by the river in the ground, much more than any district in the
region.
Nawabshah district from ground water view point can be divided into following
three belts (Refer map No.6).
(a) Riverine areas, where water is sweet upto a depth of about 200' to 250' or
more. The area is suitable for tube-wells and open wells, the former giving about 1.5 to
(b) Sweet water zone. As indicated in map No. 6, here the water is sweet to depth
of 200' to 250's and the area is suitable for tube wells and open wells with the same
discharge prospects as in (a) above.
(c) The Brackish water zone, which lies to the east of sweet water zone, and
extends upto fringes of the desert.
(d) Shallow sweet water zone. On the western edge of brackish water zone, there
is a strip, where water in shallow depths is fit for irrigation. The zone is suitable for open-
wells.
DADU DISTRICT
Geologically and geographically, the district could be divided into two main divisions:
(i) Kohistan.
(a) Khirthar range of white lime-stone, found along the main axis of Khirthar and
Laki ranges. Shaley layers at Metting and Jheruck, belong to this class, and so do
the Makli hills. The rocks emerged between 50 and 60 million years back.
(b) Deccan trap, or basalt existing in some parts of Laki range was laid 55 million
years back.
(c) ari grey sand-stone, found parallel to main Khirthar range and in the valleys
of upper Baran and Nari rivers. The most of low ground from Thano Bulla Khan
to Jungshahi is also covered by these series. These sandstone deposits were laid
by river Siwalik about 20 million, years back.
(d) ari calcareous rock series, laid 10 million years back, forma ridge parallel to
the main Khirthar range, and extend down to Hab River in Karachi district. The
rocks are visible near the western boundary of Manchhar Lake.
(f) Gaj series, consisting of a narrow ridge between Khirthar and Nari series up to
south of Tando Rahim and reappearing near Karchat and extending south and
west into Thatta and Karachi districts. These were laid before Manchhar and after
Nari formations and consist of lime-stone.
Dwarf palm is found on the western flanks of Khirthar, and at higher altitudes
wild olive grows; cactus Is also found but mostly in lower Dadu and Thatta districts
(southwest Kohistan).
(2) Alluvial plains: Alluvial plains in Dadu district were laid in recent geological
times between 1 to 4 lac years before the present times.
The plains in general could be divided in 3 classes:
(i) Kaachho, which is a barren desolate tract, adjoining the hilly country and is
conspicuous for its being devoid of vegetation, and consists of heavy clay and fine
material. Though partly formed by river Indus, the denudating hills have
contributed greatly to its formation since the recent geological times.
(ii) Old alluvial, which practically extends to the present old bed of western Nara.
This soil contains more calcareous material than the soils to the east, which have
been lately deposited by the river.
(i) Lime-stones:-They contain calcium salts soluble in water, and therefore water
in them is usually brackish, unless their cracks and fissures are big enough to allow quick
passage to water through them. Once water reaches the water table, there are less chances
of its absorbing lime-stone salts.
In the case of Khirthar range of white lime-stone, the ground water is mostly
brackish.
(ii) In case lime-stone is pure and is neither decomposed nor impregnated with
salts and does not decompose fast, the water underneath may contain less salts and may
be fresh. Such conditions are expected in Nari calcareous series and Gaj formations.
(iii) Sand-stones usually supply fresh water. Sand stones are porous, and at times
their porosity may be as high as 30-40%. The ground water in Dada district is associated
with Nari grey sand-stone, and occasionally Manchhar sand-stone formations.
In western Johi and western Sehwan Talukas, the Khirthar lime-stone rocks
themselves contain brackish water, but down in the valley along Nari and Manchhar
formations, the water is sweet. The same way, in the vast area between two main ridges
of lime-stone i.e. Khirthar range and Laki range, the ground water is sweet. This valley is
On the western ridges both in Dadu and Larkana districts, there are plateaux at
Lakhani, Daryaro, Kute-ji-Kabar and many other places. The elevation of some of these
places is about 5000', and important fruit crops can certainly be grown on them as are
grown in the Quetta valley. Some cultivation is already being done on these plateaux.
The original lower formations were laid by fresh water rivers in the bed of the sea,
but the upper formations were laid over the dry land. The upper formations were laid
partly by silt of the river and partly by decomposed material from the rocks to the west.
The latter contained calcium salts, which added to the alluvial. The net result was
accumulation of salts over the alluvial plains, which required to be leached out. The
western branch or branches of the river traversed the length and wandered through the
breadth of the district through the ages, and large quantities of water seeped in the
ground, leaching down the salts and diluting the original brackish ground water. When
the river changed the course, the brackish water, however, encroached upon the sweet
water again, converting it into saline.
It is doubtful whether the ground water left by the river along the old beds could
remain there for so many centuries, but the Western Nara continued to flow as a branch
of Indus River and was converted into a canal only as recently as 1901-1903. The supply
to the ground water was thus maintained at least partly. The result is that, with a few
exceptions, all along the banks of this old channel of river Indus, i.e. the Western Nara,
water Is sweet upto a depth of 70' or so, even today.
(v) Seepage from the river Indus. The river Indus passes along eastern border of
the district. There is water seepage into the ground from the river. Investigations have
shown that in the riverine are as, in the month of October, water table is only 2'-3' below
the ground level and it gradually slopes to wards the sides. The influence of this seepage
exists to a minimum width of 10 miles (with the exception of a few places) and maximum
of 20 miles in the strip, water upto a depth of at least 150', and at places even 250' or
more, is fit for irrigation.
(vi) Riverine areas of alluvial formations. In lower Dadu, in the south of Laki
range, the rocks are very close to the river, and the thickness of alluvial is only 100' or so.
The drainage of salts from the rocks is also towards the river. Under these circumstances,
water in a narrow strip of only 2-3 miles from the river bed at some places, is sweet and
this again to a depth ranging between 40 and 80 feet only. Below this depth water is
brackish, even in the bed of the river.
It is difficult to segregate sweet and brackish water areas in the strip of 2-3 miles.
(b) Sweet water zone, shown as "A" on the map. Similar conditions are noticed in
this zone as in (a) above. As one proceeds to the western fringes of this zone, water may
however be sweet upto 125' only, or at times even upto 100' only.
(c) Shallow sweet water zone, which lies to the west of sweet water zone, and
through the centre of which at one time flowed the Western Nara, a branch of river Indus.
On this branch stand a number of old archaeological sites. Here, water is sweet upto the
depth of 70' in most of the area. Open wells 30' to 40' deep with strainers upto 70' depth
are recommended. Open wells can give discharge of 1/3 to 1/2 a cusec of water, if
properly constructed.
(e) Mixed water zone, in the south-west of Dadu Taluka and bordering Sehwan
and johi talukas, where at places water is sweet upto 70' and at others upto 200'. Test
boring on large scale is necessary to demarcate sweet and shallow sweet water areas in
this zone.
(f) Sweet water zone in the hilly tracts of Kohistan, marked as "D" on the map.
The geology of the area has already been described. Vrendenburg, a geologist, who
visited the area in the first decade of this century, produced two papers entitled—"The
Tertiary and post-Tertiary fresh water deposits of Baluchistan and Sind", which were
printed by Geological Survey of India in 1909 and 1910. According to these papers, the
post-Tertiary, upper Siwalik, lower Siwalik and upper Nari Series, were fresh water
deposits. In other words, they were not in the sea then, and therefore there are good
possibilities of sweet water being there in these formations. There are very great chances
of getting artesian conditions, if drilling to the depth of 500' to 1000' is done in the above
formations. Normally, open wells, about 80' deep, should give discharge of about .5
cusecs, and tube wells, if deep enough, a discharge of 1 to 1.5 cusecs of water.
(g) In the Kacho area, between Laki and Kotri, there is a wide strip of a few
miles, which is inundated by river Indus almost each year (shown as B on map 7). This
extends throughout the right bank. Water in this strip, upto the depth, varying between 30'
to 70', is fit for cultivation, and a discharge of 1/3 to 1/2 a cusec can be expected from
open wells, depending upon their depth and the permeability of stratum.
QUATUM OF WATER
(i) Alluvial plains:—Through out the alluvial part of the district shown as areas
"A", "B", "C" and "G" in the map, the water is contained in the sand-strata which start at
10’ – 15’ below the ground level, and extend upto 300’-400’ or more. The sand is
(ii) Kohistan area:— Kohistan area, though the possibility of developing the
ground water is very good and at least 1/3rd of the rain water seeps into the ground, the
rain-fall is scanty and therefore the rate of recharge of the ground is very low. Average
rainfall is about 6" in the lower, 5" in the central, and 4" in the upper part of Dadu.
Assuming that only 2" of rain water percolates into the ground, we can pump
1280 acre-inches of water per square mile. This is approximately equivalent to 1/7th of a
cusec of water pumped continuously for 24 hours daily all the year around. In other
words, we can pump only one cusec of water from every 6 to 8 square miles. However,
the total rocky area in Dadu district is so much, that one can tap approximately 500
cusecs of water without lowering the water table substantially. On this water, one can
safely bring 1,50,000 acres of land under ordinary crops.
At present, we have some four tube wells working in the Kohistan area, and all
the four are about 200' deep. Three of them are giving discharge of 1.5 cusecs and one of
them about one cusec. All are fitted with centrifugal pumps, which have a limit to the
pumping capacity in rocky areas due to excessive draw-down. A better picture can be had
by installing deep well turbine-pumps.
KAREZES OR KAATS
The Karezes or Kanats probably originated in Persia or Iraq, in the ancient times, and
spread to Afghanistan, and the present Quetta and Kalat region about 3000 years back.
They are in fact a series of unlined open wells, dug upto a few feet below water table, and
connected at bottom by a tunnel. The tunnel some times is a few miles long. Being on the
sloping ground, the horizontal tunnel ultimately finds its way to the ground where the
water becomes available as flowing water. In Quetta area, the average karez is about a
mile long, having shafts (or open wells) at maximum of intervals of 150' (i.e. 30-40 shafts
per mile). The cost of the karez is between Rs. 50,000 and Rs. 100,000. The average
discharge is about 1/2 a cusec.
Fig No. 5
Principle of a Karez
ARTESIA WELLS
The existence of springs is a clear indication of ground water in a particular area. In hilly
tracts, we have springs at Rani-jo-Kot, Wahi-Pindi, Tando Rahim Khan, Pir Gazi. Naing,
Pir Ari, Tong, Pokran, Gorandi, Phadeh, Kandhar, Garmach and Osman Bhutti etc. In
fact, a spring is nothing but a natural artesian well. Artesian condition does not mean that
water should start flowing freely against gravity. If by digging an open well or drilling a
Some of these, nais flow only for a short period during rains, but the major ones
like Naig, Gaj and Baran keep: flowing sometimes even upto February. On excavation in
their bottom, they are found to contain water at a depth of a few feet. On both the banks
of these streams, there are chances of getting sweet water. Their banks could be
developed on the lines of Malir River at Karachi by putting in open wells or tube wells.
Open wells could also be sunk in some of the more dry streams. Right in. the bed of these
nais or along their banks in the Zone, "D" there are almost 100% chances of getting
water. In case of zone "E", streams, like sann river and, lower baran (after leaving Thano
Bulla Khan) pass through lime-stone rocks. The quality of water in these streams is
therefore bound to be affected by local conditions, and water should be tested before use.
Chances in the case of Sann nai. are that ground water is brackish, though in the case of
lower Baran nai chances of sweet water are more, specially on its right bank.
In Quetta and Kalat divisions the rain water is conserved by putting temporary or
permanent earthen check dams in the bed of rain-fed rivers. Rain water during flood is
diverted across these check dams, and spread over a large area prepared in advance for
cultivation.
The entire population of Kohistan is nomadic, ever moving with their flocks, in
search of fodder and food. No sooner a particular area ceases to provide grazing to their
flocks, than they shift to new pastures. There are only a few permanent villages in
Kohistan. In dry years, when rains fail, the population moves to adjoining plains. They
make their mobile dwellings from reeds tied together into make-shift tents with ropes
made from brushes, and earn their living from cattle produce like ghee, butter and wool,
out of which they sometime make woolen carpets, and loading bags etc. For colouring
their wool for carpets etc; they use the indigenous material known as lakh, which they
extract from babul plant. They breed sheep and cattle in lower Kohistan (including
Thatta), and camels in Kaachho, a desolate, tree-less tract, east of the rocks and west of
Sind-Hollow.
Along the nais, plants of alluvial plains like tamarisk, kandi, (poplis) and panpas
grass are common. On hard patches, ber tree is also found. All these plants are indicators
of fair quantities of ground water of good quality. Occasionally in low patches, where
there is accumulation of salts due to seepage etc Ak and Khabar plants are also found.
Typha reeds and canes also grow along the nais. The typha is used for making
boards for dwellings and so the reeds, Brushes, sedges, and other wild grasses are used as
horse and cattle feed. Baskets are made from typha, which, at one time found almost a
ready market in Sind villages. Some grasses like are used for making ropes, which also
find good market for packing as well as for netting of cots. Cheaper type mats for floor
covering called tada are also made from the reeds. In some of the depressions in the area,
perennial water in the shape of ponds is also encountered. Crocodiles are many times
found in such places, which are a danger to both human beings and the cattle. In some
cases, fish is also found in these ponds.
The hilly tract of Dadu, Larkana and Thatta districts having rain-fed rivers or even
streams, could be developed by the water-spreading or sailabi method. Water-spreading
has still another advantage. Part of water percolates down in the ground, to add to the
water table. If the water down below is fit, it could later on be pumped out and used for
irrigation.
In southern area f Dadu district, around Thano Bula Khan, there are high wind
velocities. No data for Thano Bula Khan is available, but the data for Hyderabad and
Wind mills, though not as economical as diesel power, have relevance in the
Kohistan area, where means of communication being poor, transport of oils and greases
will be a serious problem, and mechanics for maintenance or repair of diesel engines
would hardly be available in time. In this part of Kohistan, there are quite a number of
small villages, constantly facing difficulties of water supply for themselves and their
cattle. The area, being important grazing land for cattle, does deserve attention, so that
livestock industry receives proper encouragement, wind mills, at a few sites, could be
easily installed as an experimental measure for pumping out water, which could then be
stored in small surface tanks, for use by man and his animals. Similar installation can be
done in the Kohistan area of Thatta district as well.
The cost of a wind-mill of 25' diameter on a 60' tower would be Rs. 20,000, and
the cost of open well approximately Rs. 7,000.
THATTA DISTRICT
Thatta district could be divided in the following four ground water zones.
(Refer map No. 8).
(a) Kohistan area.
(b) Plains of G.M. Barrage.
(c) Riverine area.
(d) Coastal area.
(a) Kohistan area. From ground water view point, Kohistan area of the district
may again be divided into three groups:
(ii) ari sand-stone, which extends from Thano Bula Khan to Jhimpir and
Jungshahi. The valley is covered with sediments of other rocks also. Test boring was
done in a small area around Jhimpir in 1959. In about 50% cases, all in Nari formations,
water was found fit for cultivation. Large scale test boring is necessary. There are
chances of getting sweet water in the whole tract covered by these series, i.e. area north-
west of Jhimpir and north-east of Jungshahi, extending all along to Thano Bula Khan.
(iv) ari formation. These formations consist of clay and sand stones of Tertiary
formation. These may contain sweet water, but as they are made of finer material, the
yield of water will be low, unless deep drilling is done and deep well turbines are
installed. The area extends from Jungshahi to Ran Pathani. Two tube-wells, with
centrifugal pumps, installed at Ran Pathani in 1958 and 1959, are yielding 1/2 a cusec of
water each. A deep well turbine would probably give a much higher yield.
The rain water from nallas, specially from Kalu nai, which passes near Jhimpir,
could be spread over the land and cultivation carried out on preserved moisture.
Approximately 10 miles north-west of Jhimpir, this nai has a loop, where it could be
dammed, and water spread over an area of approximately 25 sq. miles of land, which is a
good quality alluvial soil, and at present lies barren except for a few dwarf kandi trees
scattered all over. The people are nomadic, and living conditions are similar as in the
Kohistan area of Dadu district.
The alluvial plains of G.M. Barrage in Thatta and Hyderabad have emerged out of
Rann of Kuchh in the recent times due to silting up. During maximum flood, the silt
contained in the river Indus is about 0.6%. Taking 100 days as good average of high
flood, the silt carried to sea will approximately be 120 million cubic feet, which will
cover 38 square miles to a depth of a yard. Thus the river will form 22 square miles of
new land each year, considering the present depth of the beach.
The delta is therefore advancing every year. At the time of Alexander's conquest,
the sea extended upto Gujo, and the area from Gharo to Ibrahim Hydri was covered by
sea. From Gujo to Gharo, and perhaps to the north it was dry, but to the south-west it was
definitely under sea. The map No. 1 shows the delta limits at the following periods of
history:
1. Greek times (Alexander's conquest - 327 B.C.) (36 miles average). At this time
the sea extended upto Gujo area.
2. Arab times 71 l A.D. (16 miles average).
3. Middle ages (l0 miles average).
4. Eighteenth Century (2 miles average).
5. The present time.
It could thus be seen that the sea is receding at an approximate rate of 1 mile per
century. This would also indicate that the whole G.M. Barrage command area must have
been under the sea, ten or twenty thousand years ago. Under such conditions water in the
plains of G.M. Barrage, whether in Thatta or Hyderabad districts, must be brackish. No
wonder that the "Chach Nama" refers to the report about conditions in the Sind delta area,
said to have been laid before the Khalif to the effect that "the water in lower Sind was
dark and dirty, its fruit was bitter and poisonous its land was stony and rough and its earth
saltish."
The Indus kept on changing its courses in this delta from time to time. Major
General Haig's "Indus, the Delta country" is a good study of the subject. The river Indus
and Hakra (or the Eastern Nara), while passing through a given area must have diluted its
Study of ground water in the riverine area of G.M. Barrage tract has not been done, but in
all probability, water upto the shallow depths of 30' or so could be sweet. In many
villages out-side the river protective bond, there are shallow sweet water wells only 15'-
20' deep for potable purposes. If sweet water is at all located, due to fineness of sand in
the area, discharges of not more than 1/8 a cusec could be expected from open wells.
Further investigation can be done by test boring.
The water near the coast is bound to be brackish. The coconut plants alone can
stand saline water to some degree. Investigation of the quality of this water could be
fruitful for judging the prospects of coconut plantations in the area. The-coastal belt of
Thatta district comes within the zone of high wind belt. Since the water table in the
coastal belt is high, and the wind velocity is also higher than in other areas, and with
much longer duration, a 25' wind mill costing Rs. 20,000 could be utilized to pump 1/8 of
a cusec for approximately 4,400 hours annually. Such a capital investment is obviously
too high, but on long term basis, it may be worth while, if the coconut plantations prove
successful in the belt.
SAGHAR DISTRICT
A small area of Sanghar district holds sweet water. Three courses of river Indus
can be distinctly located in this area, one of which leads to the Eastern Nara and is
definitely pre-historic. Two other courses, one of which ends into the Eastern Puran and
the other into Western Puran, belong to the historic period - the first to the times of
Alexander, and the western-most to the time of the Arab conquest. The courses are shown
There should be a zone of shallow sweet water in the district between 2nd and 3rd
old courses of the river, belonging to historic times. Test boring and survey of existing
wells can help in getting more information about this area.
Further to the east is the desert, the conditions of which are similar to the Thar
desert, with the only exception that it is less grassy, and gets less rainfall.
HYDERABAD DISTRICT
(i) The Ganjo Taker hills, which are an out-crop of the Khirthar lime-stone, and
are seen around Hyderabad. The hills extend below the ground to a
considerable area. An extension of similar rocks was located at Badin, at the
depth of 950', by Standard Vaccum Oil Co,. while drilling for oil, a few years
back.
(ii) Recent and sub-recent alluvial formations, which cover rest of the district.
The Ganjo-Takar hills (shown in map 10,) which are in partial decomposed state,
absorb rain water, which goes down into their cracks and fissures up to a depth of about
200'. The water absorbs salts from the rocks and turns brackish. This water is totally un-
suitable for crops, or human consumption.
The water does not remain static in the rocks, but drains slowly towards all sides.
Investigations show that the influence of this water spreads to a width of approximately 8
to 9 miles on all sides. Thus, on Hyderabad-Mirpurkhas road, water is brackish upto the
9th mile, on Hyderabad-Hala road upto Miani forest, and on Hyderabad-Tando
Mohammad Khan road it is brackish throughout. On the western side, sweet water should
not be expected even in the bed of the river except at very shallow depths.
However, in 9 miles around the hills, the zone covered by alluvial formations holds
sweet water in shallow depths upto 40' or so, which is fit for cultivation and for human
consumption. This water could be exploited by open wells, on small scale. Putting down
large number of open wells will lower the water table, which will in due course be
replaced by brackish water from the hills, rendering the whole area saline.
ALLUVIAL PLAIS
Alluvial plains of the district could be divided into two distinct formations:—
These could further be divided into geographical zones of Kacha (riverine) and
Pacca areas respectively.
Sub-recent formations are about 2,00,000 to 4,00,000 years old, and the recent
formations are less than 1,00,000 years old.
The area south of Tando Fazal is of recent formation, and was covered by Rann of
Kuchh till recent geological times. It was a shallow sea, and went on slowly getting silted
up, due to sediments brought by river Indus and the Eastern Nara. The coast line was as
near as in the vicinity of Badin and Jati, only 2500 years back, and Aban Shah now a hill,
was a sea island at the time of Alexander's conquest, as already mentioned. These facts
would indicate how late has been, the deposits of these formations.
Spill-waters of Sutlej River, till 1226, were flowing in the present Eastern Nara
and Puran beds. The Western Puran borders Hyderabad district south of Pangrio. Because
the formation is of very recent origin, the salts contained in the sub-soil have not leached
out and therefore ground water is highly saline or brackish. The salt contents increase
with the depth and sometimes reach 70000 parts per million parts of water. This is more
than twice the salt content of sea water. The logs of a bore carried out by Standard
Vacuum Oil Company at Badin for oil, show the existence of alluvial formations
containing brackish water having salinity of 30,000 parts per million at depth of 950'
Beyond this there is rock, which contained water having salinity of 100,000 parts per
million from 1762' to 6533'.
Old River beds. The map No. 10, shows the old beds of river Indus through the
district in the historical times. The river has wandered across the entire district from time
to time. The periods during which the river flowed at different places have been
explained in chapter IV.
The Indus was flowing down south till it changed its course near Unarpur during
the days of Ghulam Shah Kalhoro in the year 1758. Prior to that it was flowing from,
present Unarpur, straight south of Nasarpur and Tando Mohammad Khan. The old bed is
traceable from Hala downwards, by a large mass of sand dunes and depressions which
pass Nasarpur, and down south to Shaikh Bhrikio. Below this point, the old bed is not
well defined. From Tando Mohammad Khan the river was flowing south to the Rann of
Kuchh and was called Ren River. A western branch of it, near Tando Mohammad Khan,
known as Phito, made a loop towards Jhok.
At Jhok, it branched off into two different channels, one of which passed south of
Thatta, and the other north of it, both again meeting near Mirpur Sakro One of these
branches was called Kalri, and the other Baghar.
Old towns like Nasarpur, Bukerani, Khokhar, Tando Mohammad Khan were thus
on the main, river, whereas Matli, Jun (now in ruins) Lowari and Kadhan were on the
Ren river, Bulri and Jhok were on Phito and Pir Ali Mardan, Khorwah and Jati were on
another branch of it known as seer. Mohammad Tur (Shah Kapur) was also on the Seer
branch.
The water from the rivers in the arid zones always seeps into the ground on both
sides and remains there for many centuries, as the natural rate of drainage of soils in, arid
zones usually is very low. However, since the formations through which the water seeps
happen to be of different geological times, the chemicals present in the formations have
an influence on the ground water. In case of recent formations, the seepage water from
river acts with salts present in the soil and slowly runs brackish. Over the centuries, this is
what has happened in the whole area.
Principle of encroachment of brackish water on sweet water when the rate of pumping
exceeds the rate of replenishment
The figure shows the brackish or salt water on the fringes of sweet water zone. As
the fresh water is pumped, draw-down occurs which induces flow of water from brackish
water zone and slowly sweet water turns brackish.
Sub-recent formations in the area are known to lie to the north of latitude 25º-20º
passing east to west, between Tando Fazal and Khokhar village. South of it, the
formations are recent, and have been reclaimed from Rann of Kuchh due to silting up.
The water in the sub-recent formations (2,00,000 to 4,00,000 years old) is sweet, as they
have been drained of the salt initially contained in them. A large number of borings have
There is a continuing seepage of water from the river Indus on both sides to an
approximate width of 10 to 15 miles, and in this area, the water is accordingly sweet. The
water at Saidabad, Hala, Bhit Shah, Sikhat, Khaibar, Matiari and down upto the Miani
forest is sweet, because of the seepage from the, river. At isolated places near Matiari and
above the Miani forest, there are pockets of brackish water, which are due to underground
drainage of salts from hills near Khanpur on the other side of the river in Dadu district.
The whole area has a very great potential for development of ground water, which
is sweet upto a depth of more than 250' in most cases.
In the recent formations, the old river courses must have left huge quantities of
water, but these slowly turned saline, as the brackish water of the surrounding area
encroached upto it. The sweet water could be located at the same places only along the
old river beds, upto the depth of 20'-70'. A number of towns namely Jhok, Bulri, Pir Ali
Mardan, Tando Mohammad Khan, Matli, Badin, Lowari & Khorwah, get their supplies
from these deposits, and so is the case with Jati in Thatta district. Recently, few hand
pumps were installed near the bed of Western Puran, south of Pangrio, and sweet water
struck upto a depth of 70' or 80'. But all these are isolated pockets, and can supply sweet
water only when some water flows in the old beds of the channels. Any large scale
pumping will disturb equilibrium, and due to lowering of water table at the pumping site,
brackish water from the neighbouring area will displace it, converting the ground water
brackish. Any attempt for exploitation of ground water for irrigation purposes in the area,
should therefore be discarded, except possibly in the case of very small scale cultivation
for kitchen gardens.
The river Indus passes through the upper western boundary of the district. West of
the river there is the range of Khirthar lime-stone hills, the base of which is in the Dadu
district. The brackish water from the hills drains towards the river, but in all probability
we should expect sweet water in the riverine area upto the depth of 200' from Hala upto
Miani Forest, except in small pockets near Matiari. South of Miani Forest and down upto
Jamshoro, due to heading up of water on account of the G.M. Barrage, sweet water can
be expected upto the depth of 30' to 60'. Below the Ghulam Mohammad. Barrage
headworks and upto Jherruck, water is brackish except in isolated pockets. No
investigation of this area has been done.
The sand is medium in upper parts of the district and gradually becomes finer as it
reaches the coast line.
The medium type of sand, when met, will give a yield of about 1.5 cusecs of
water, if the, tube-well is 150', deep, and will yield 1/3 to 1/2 a cusec from open wells 40'
deep, with 30' filters.
The entire sand layer is saturated, with water. The, water table in the, whole area
is along the sand line, and no dry sand is encountered anywhere. The recent alluvial,
where water table is, between 8' and 12' can therefore be considered as, water-logged, as
this water, can rise any time by, capillary action through 8' of the top clayey layer.
Map, No. 10, shows the, area of sweet, and brackish, water and the location of
various test, bores and their results. The map shows the existence of sweet water tube-
wells at Jhandomari and Tando Mohammad Khan, in the, brackish water zone. Here the
water is sweet because the wells are installed in the bed of old river Renn, which at a later
date became a canal known as Phulleli from the Indus. The water is sweet upto 190’ or
so. Only a mile away from these tube wells, water is brackish. These wells are on fringes
of the sweet water zone, and at least one well has already, turned brackish, though two
more at Tando Mohammad Khan and one at Jhando Mari are still supplying sweet water.
However the wind mill is not as economical as diesel power, and it should be
encouraged only at those places where the transport of diesel oil may be a problem. For
municipal needs, it is indeed preferable to diesel power, as it cuts down the red tape in
repairs and maintenance.
A 25' dia wind mill on 60' tower shall give an approximate discharge of 1/8th of a
cusec (as much as the Persian-wheel) against a head of 40' and will cost Rs. 20,000
including installation. A few wind mills could be tried: for town water supply, to start
with.
(i) Sweet water zone---open wells about 30' to 35' deep, with strainers upto a
depth of 70' to 80' and tube wells 150' to 200' deep.
(ii) Along beds of old rivets---open wells for drinking water only and irrigation
wells on very small scale near existing channels.
(iii) Riverine area north of Miani forest---tube wells 50' to 200' deep and open
wells as in area (i).
(iv) Riverin area south of Miani forest, upto Ghulam Mohammad Barrage Head
works---open wells as in area (i).
(v) Riverine area south of G.M. Barrage head works---open wells, if sweet water
is available.
THARPARKAR DISTRICT
As explained in the preceding chapter, the Pat, Thar, and Parker were formed by
the action of southwest winds which blew sand, tiny sea shells and salts over the desert
area. There is some contribution of denundating hills between Budhapur and Karachi
including Ganjo-Takar also, but most of the sand came from the old sea (the Rann of
Kuchh which extended upto Rohri). The occasional sand-stone layers are met, but there
seems to be the sands formed sand-stone. These two are responsible for the "perched
water zones" in Pat and Thar.
In Nagarparkar, an 1100' rock out-crop lies in the centre of the peninsula, and the
soil is not so deep. Occasional sand-stone layers are met, but there seems to be absence of
calcareous formations, particularly in the sweet water zone.
There are low valleys between the high sand hills, lying in high wind belt near the
lower Indus delta, in which cultivation to a limit is done on rain water. These sand hills
grow smaller further east. Bajra is the main crop in these valleys. Mostly the land is not
prepared in advance. Only after the first shower, some ploughing is done. Even a small
quantity of rain suffices to grow a surprisingly good crop, and profuse green vegetation
crops up immediately all around. The crops grown on rain water are Bajra, Till, Sarseem,
Jambho and castor.
In the Thar area only those places, where ground water for human and cattle
consumption is available, are populated. The Economy of Thar depends on grazing.
Complete failure of rains in one year or partial failure in two successive years often
causes famine. The cattle which is the only capital and mainstay of the people when
overtaken by such conditions, cannot cross 150 miles of the desert, and perish almost
entirely. Goats and camel alone which live on the desert shrubs, survive such conditions.
Many tracts are un-inhabitable mainly for want of drinking water, which lies buried as
deep as 300 feet.
There are approximately 3,50,000 heads of cattle in Thar desert. Their life, as
much as the life of their human masters, depends on rain water. In every 11 years there is
a cycle of about 2 years of scanty rain-fall, when famine conditions exist, and the cattle
perish for want of food and water. The water from wells is to be raised by human beings,
who under such circumstances, migrate, leaving their cattle behind.
A large number of small diameter wells exist in the Thar area (Ref: map No. 11).
The largest number of them is in Chhachro Taluka, which gets less rain fall than Mithi,
Nagarparkar and Diplo. The average rain fall in the desert Talukas is as under:-
1. Nagarparkar 14”
2. Mithi 11”
3. Diplo 11”
4. Chhachro 10”
5. Urnerkot 8”
6. Khipro 6”
Along the edge of Rann of Kuchh, water is found at the depth of only 26' to 30',
whereas, away from the Rann, the water table becomes deeper. It is difficult to generalize
but in the case of limited areas there seems to be a general co-relation between the depth
of water and level of ground. The level as a rule rises towards Aravalli hills, and therefore
in the Thar area it rises as one goes east-wards from the Indus plains or northwards from
Nagarparkar. The water depth also seems to increase on the similar lines. In the case of
Pat area, reverse will be the case. Deepest wells are in Khipro Taluka, on the Indian
Border. Near the western fringes of the desert along Eastern Nara or old Hakra, water is
available in plenty at shallow depths. This water had its origin from the river Hakra,
which remained dry for atleast 6 centuries, and as such the original sweet water turned
brackish. 30 miles eastwards from Nara bed, water is reached at the depth.of 200'. Near
the Indian border in Chhachro and Khipro Talukas.one must go 300' or more to get some
water. This water is being utilized for drinking purposes, but invariably salt contents are
too high to make it fit for irrigation.
On both the sides of Hakra or old Nara, water up to a depth varying between 50'
to 70' is sweet. The Department of Agriculture carried out some borings near Umerkot,
where sweet water was located upto approximately 60' to 70'. This is the residual water
due to seepage from the old Hakra River. In Diplo Taluka, along the bed of old Hakra or
Eastern Puran, in a width of 2 miles or so, some, open wells have been dug, which
contain sweet water. Similar pockets of sweet water may be expected along the whole
length of Hakra, though water is brackish in the surrounding areas. This is a special
phenomenon. The sweet water being lighter than brackish water floats on it. So long the
water supply in the Nara bed is main-tamed, water on both the banks, in narrow width,
and shallow depths, shall remain fit for drinking, and even for irrigation, though for the
latter purpose the quantities available would be too small.
Wells are usually of 3' to 4' diameter, and are dug 3' to 4' below the water-table.
Their depth sometimes goes upto 300'. Because of small diameter, they do not collapse.
Below this depth, due to small diameter, further excavation becomes impossible. The
portion below the water table usually contains the coarse gravel and sand and is apt to
collapse by caving in, unless protected by some artificial means. This is usually done by
lowering a circular frame, made from the branches of Laee or other bushes. it looks like a
3' to 4' diameter circular ring. A number of rings each. 6" in height are piled over one
another and wooden pegs are driven through them. The space around the whole frame is
filled with bushes, etc. This works as a filter and its life is approximately one to two
years. Some times bricks are used in place of the above mentioned wooden ring. But in
absence of proper curb and binding cement, the bricks usually give way. Being very
shallow, below the water table, the wells usually dry up after a few dozen gallons are
A survey of the existing wells in a limited area of Diplo Taluka was carried out
around Diplo town in 1959. The results showed that in approximately 40% cases, water
was sweet and fit for irrigation. The phenomenon could only be explained on the basis of
the theory that sweet water floats on brackish water below it. It has already been
mentioned that open wells in the bed of Puran, in Diplo Taluka, can yield smaller
quantities of water, fit for irrigation.
Perched water can definitely not be a perennial source of water. One has therefore
to look for deep seated water, which may be available at a much lower depth. This water
could only be tapped by tube wells. Sand in the desert is coarser than that existing in the
alluvial plains, and therefore is more suited for tube wells, if large volumes of water are
discovered. No artesian conditions exist in the desert area.
In order to protect, and further develop, cattle industry in Thar, the ground water
investigation, and conservation of rain water, wherever it may collect, is necessary. The
areas being inaccessible, wind mills probably will be the only practical power unit in the
Thar area. Their application is described in Chapter XII.
SALT DEPOSITS
There is a number of wells in the whole area called Parkar, in each village there
being at least one According to a rough estimate, their number reaches as thousand. A
survey of these wells was carried out in 1959 to find out suitability of ground water for
irrigation. The depth of the well, depth of water table, total soluble salts and PH. value of
60 representative wells from the whole area is given in the table No. I. On the basis of
this data the ground water map of the area has been prepared. (Refer map No. 12). The
water table in the wells, varies between 10' to 60', the average being 30'. From these
results it was found that 60% of the wells were fit for irrigation, 10% marginal and 30%
The Nagarparkar soil is also better than that of the desert. There is more silt and
clay in it than in the desert, though sand still is dominant. In Parkar area they grow Mung,
Gowar, Til, Methi, Urid, Turia, but important cash crops are castor and onion. Wheat is
also grown on well-irrigation, on a limited scale. The Parkar area grows more than 50
thousand maunds of castor sped and an equal- quantity of Til, annually. If proper
communication facilities are made available in that area, castor cultivation could be
increased considerably. It may be worth while mentioning here that Parkar, unlike Thar
desert, is a flat country, with no sand dunes. Its land is of a good quality and has enough
ground water. It can easily be converted into greenary.
The wells as a rule being unlined, usually collapse as mentioned above, due to
caving in from sides, after a few months or at the most a year's: service. The water for the
purpose of irrigation is lifted from these wells, by means of leather buckets (locally
known as Bokas), which can lift 40 gallons at a time. Boka is pulled by a pair of bullocks
or four donkeys. The camel is not used for this purpose. Persian wheels and diesel
pumping sets were unknown in this area till they were introduced by the Department of
Agriculture in 1960-61. The Boka seems to be originally a device adopted from Central
India. It is similr to the one used in Daccan and Madhya Pradesh. Boka has an advantage
to the Persian heel in as-much-as it does not spill water back into the well. It has the form
of a tea kettle with a spout. It is raised or lowered from its top, with rope over a pulley.
Another rope is attached to the spout which passes over a small pulley kept at a lower
level. When the bag passes over the level of the smaller pulley, the spout is pulled
horizontally and the water rushes out from the spout into the outlet already built.
1. The animals for each turn have to walk forward and get back in the reverse.
This walking back in the reverse is a very hard and slow job for the animals.
2. At least one person is needed all the time to guide the animals, and another to
watch the lower pulley and to guide the rope over it.
While carrying out the survey for wells in the area, it was expected that the wells
like those in the lower Indus valley will give discharge of 1/8 to 1/6 of a cusec of water,
but at the time of constructing open wells in this area, it was found that the permeability
of the sand was very high, and at one place excavation of an open well further down was
even abandoned as the dewatering pump of one cusec capacity could not dry it up even
after 24 hours pumping. The average wells in this area thus can give about 1/2 a cusec of
water. Were it not for the difficulty of transporting diesel oil, the 6-7 h.p. pumping set
would be most ideal unit. The area happens to be outside the high wind zone, and, data
about the wind velocity in the area is not known. If wind velocities of 10 to 12 miles per
hour were available, a 25' diameter wind mill could replace a Persian wheel, as water is
available at shallow depths. The cost of wind mill of this size, including tower and
installation, would be about Rs. 20,000.
There is no danger of wells drying up in the Parker area. Average rainfall is 14",
which is the highest in the southern zone. Though the rain-fall in 1957 was scanty, still
the wells did not dry up in 1958. The rain-fall during 1958 was 12.99 inches, and at the
time of survey in May 1959, none of the wells had dried up, though as locally reported,
the water table had fallen down generally by 10' in 10 months. This figure shows a rather
too exorbitant natural drainage. It could therefore be assumed that most of the wells got
initially fitted up due to rain water and seepage from surrounding area, rather than by the
actual rise of water table by 10'.
The sweet water perhaps extends up to the depth of 100' or so in the centre of the
Parkar area, and this depth slowly decreases till near the Rann of Kuchh water turns
saline. To investigate this, test drilling is necessary.
Open well 40' deep, with 20-30, feet of filter in it can easily yield 1/2 a cusec or
more water. A hundred feet deep tube well fitted with a turbine pump can give 1.5 cusecs
in suitable areas. However for this area an open well instead of a tube well will be
preferable, until such time the area is properly connected by metal road with the plains.
Quantity of water is indicated by the vegetative growth of the plants, trunk girth,
height etc. Larger and more leafy trees will allow more water to transpire to the
atmosphere, which would mean larger ground water supplies.
Below are some of the plants, which may indicate ground water table.
These plants grow on margins and borders of shallow water and on pools. Such
growth shows presence of water at small depth and the quality of water it indicates is also
usually good. The growth is abundant in low lying dhands and ponds in this region. This
type of growth also indicates that the ground water is perennial, since such plants cannot
survive temporary dry periods.
We cannot rely upon these plants as indicators of ground water, while we think in
terms of pumping for irrigation, as they indicate water only at shallow depths.
Common reed and giant reed grass (Sindhi sarr) is found along streams and
ponds, where there is no surface water, but where ground water is not far below the
surface. It is the most reliable indicator of shallow ground water (at depth of 3' to 4').
These are wild grasses looking like wheat and barley etc., and attain a height
varying from a few feet to even 10' or more.
They indicate fresh water supplies, but can also thrive on alkaline soils and
brackish water, though in such cases the growth will not be so luxurant.
This plant thrives in alkaline soils, and in those containing sulphates and gypsum.
They also indicate water table varying between 10' to 30'. Rise of table above 10' affects
the plant growth. They thrive on brackish water.
This plant in post-barrage period has wildly expanded in irrigated tracts of Sukkur
Barrage. It is not found in areas of high water table, but is only come across where water
table is below 15'. The plant seems to thrive well where water is sweet, though it can
establish in ditches, etc., where sweet water accumulates for longer periods, even if in
such cases ground water is brackish. It has established itself along Karachi-Hyderabad
road in ditches and depressions, where ground water is brackish and the water table more
than 60' deep, but under such conditions its growth is usually very poor.
6. Prospis (Sindhi:Kandi).
It is normally an indicator of sweet water, but thrives in northern Parkar area too,
where water is brackish and is usually 50' to 60' deep. It is a poor species of prospis in
such conditions.
This plant shows the same habits as 5 above. Basically it is a sweet plant, but, is
found in Thar desert area in depressions where ground water though slightly brackish is
not very deep (50'-60' or so). In some cases there is no regular water table, but it thrives
on perched water at similar depths.
It grows in localities, where water table is not below 20'. It grows better if water
table is higher than that, and can survive even when water table rises to 5 to 6 feet below
the surface. It usually indicates fresh, ground water and in large supplies.
9. Palm trees.
Unfortunately they do not always indicate good water and some times even grow
near springs where water is bad. A healthy clump of palms means that water is drinkable.
They indicate shallow water table within a few feet.
This can grow quickly on light soils having preserved moisture and is found along
canal beds and riverine tracts etc. However, for a thick and, large growth, it must have
permanent sweet-ground water supplies even at depths of 20' to 30'.
Unfortunately, in the arid zones of Pakistan and India no research work worth
notice has been done on this subject. A study of plant growth and vegetation as related to
water table, its quality and quantity and soil condition,' can help us in locating water
wells, at least for drinking purposes, in Thar area, and possibly for irrigation, in Kohistan
area.
I found large wild growth of babul, prospis and tamarsik in the Rohri sub-
division, which meant that large supplies of sweet water should exist here. In 1960 we
put in 24 test bores in the area from Ubauro to Rohri and in the width of 20 to 25 miles.
The bores were on the average 150' deep. We found that in 90% cases the water was
sweet and fit for irrigation.
In the same year we carried out survey of some parts of Thar desert and found that
though prospis and babul species did survive there, the growth was poor, they had less
girth, and their leaf-growth was not enough, all because, the ground water was brackish.
In most of the Thar area, we have leafless growth like Khip, Phog, Lani and Akk.
In some depressions where the water stands for longtime, Kirir, tamarisk, Tali, Kandi,
and Ber also grow, but they do not attain the size of their counter-parts in the plains.
In G.M. Barrage area, the wild growth is mostly Khabar, which indicates alkaline
soil and brackish water.
In some depressions tamarisk also grows, but these depressions are annually
flooded by inundation water or Pancho water from rice fields. Since water down below is
brackish, tamarisk has never attained considerable size or height in G.M. Barrage zone.
These indications should suggest that search for sweet water in that area has to be
abandoned. Along Puran in Dehs Kotadao I and II and towards south in Mithi I, II and
III, a thick wild babul growth was observed which indicated sweet water at least upto 50'
or so. Hand pumps installed upto depth of 70', proved this to be correct, but width of this
sweet water belt was hardly a mile on both the banks.
The subject of plants as indicators of ground water requires further study and
investigation by hydrologists and botanists.
In the case of alluvial plains, there is no fear that the water table will go down if
large scale pumping is done. The water table is already too high, and the development of
ground water will on the contrary help solving water logging problems.
The alluvial plains of the two divisions are irrigated by the three barrages, namely
Gudu, Sukkur and G.M. It is apprehended that it may not be possible to achieve the
designed intensity in these barrages. The designed intensity of Sukkur Barrage is 81%
whereas in actual practice this has hardly reached 60%. Attainment of 55% intensity may
be considered as good average in the case of this barrage.
The reason for this is that the designed intensity has been fixed on the basis of
total volume of water discharged by a canal annually, and volumetric water requirements
of crops, ignoring the peak water requirements of different crops. The area under
cultivation has automatically been adjusted as per peak water requirement of the crops
and availability of water. Of the peak demand, the water is wasted or certain crops are
unnecessarily given over doze of water. Since the canals cannot be designed to take
different quantities of water at different times of the year, there is in fact no remedy to
this The only solution lies in supplementing the water by tube wells in areas, where extra
demand for water arises.
The rainfall in the area varies between 6" at the southern end to 4" at the northern
end. We really cannot pump more than 1/6th of a cusec of water per square mile of area
continuously for 24 hours a day and 365 days annually.
In Kohistan however the rocks are bare, devoid of natural vegetation, and
fissured. Most of rain water finds its way to water table, and evapo-transpiration rate is
minimised. The replenishment to ground water table is maximum in fissured lime-stone
series namely Khirthar, Gaj and Nari formations. Where the rocks are not decomposed
the water is fit for irrigation as explained in connection with Dadu and Thatta districts.
However as we move down from mountains to less permeable areas of Kachho or alluvial
plains the rate of infiltration becomes low and some times is entirely lost by evapo-
transpiration. But water that infiltrates, in rocky areas adjacent to Kachho finally reaches
the alluvial plains by seepage through permeable strata, which lie some 50'-60' below the
Luckily there are very few or no shrubs in the Kohistan hills and therefore evapo-
transpiration losses are negligible. This water could be developed by wells and tube
wells, but if excessive pumping is done, the water table may lower down sufficiently to
dry up the wells and tube wells, and ultimately make happy and fruitful life only
impossibility.
(i) Extending soil and water conservation practice, as suggested, to the whole
area. This will help absorption of more water in the ground.
(ii) Creating under-ground barriers in the rain-fed rivers or nais. The experiment
has succeeded at Damloti in Malir River. These areas being of rocks having fissures,
water up-stream definitely penetrated 'the banks, and was absorbed or drained away
slowly, but the water level in the wells up-stream not only rose but supplies became more
abundant, and were assured even in the dry season.
(iii) Creating water absorption basins. The damming of river Baren at Dau or
Darwat is being objected to on the ground that rocks around have fissures and the water is
bound to leak out. But even if these basins, when dammed, do not hold all the water
instead of its being lost as run off, it could be absorbed there and thus add to the under-
ground reservoir.
In the Kohistan region the nallas or rain fed river beds, are filled with very porous
gravel. The re-charge rate in such formations will normally be 5 times or more than even
the fissured rocks of the same region. The rate of recharge in these streams could further
be increased by bunding them at different points, so that natural slope is reduced and
water stands there for longer time.
(v) Open wells in the bottom of nais properly protected on sides could also act as
recharge wells at the time of flood. The wells have as much capacity to absorb as they
have to yield water, Kohistan area is intersected by a number of rain fed rivers, some of
which like Gaj keep flowing even upto February. Water from some of these rivers is used
for irrigation to a limited extent though not scientifically. On Dilan river for example they
It is important in that case of recharge wells (whether open well type and filter
type or so called inverted tube wells) that:—
(i) the formation opposite to filter slots or the bottom of open well should be
highly permeable.
(ii) there should be no impervious layers between the filter and the stratas to be
replenished.
(iii) the recharge water should be free from any sediments which may choke up
the water bearing strata.
(iv) for a good rate of recharge the water head in the recharge well should be
maintained at maximum height.
(v) periodical cleaning of the well bottom or filter slots should be done.
By putting wells and tube wells along the banks of these nais the induced
recharge zone is created as shown in Fig No. 9.
In this area there is in fact very little run off water. Some times it flows and
collects in depressions. In these depressions locally called tarais, water stands for two
months or some times even more. Some of the tarais cover a few sq. miles and only a
small portion of these is flooded by water. By dividing the tarais into smaller plots of say
4 acres each, the rain water could properly be diverted and spread over the basin. Later
on, the area could be developed on the lines of Sailabi cultivation.
Lined wells could also be put in the tarais for supply of water for drinking, and at
the time of rains, the rain water could be allowed to go in them. If the wells are properly
lined with bricks and cement, and the water is thus diverted into large number of wells in
In humid areas the precipitation causes the leaching of lime, whereas in the arid
zones, the lime does not leach and forms an impervious layer or pan which stops further
percolation. In Thar desert the clay layer at top forms impervious barrier and therefore
percolation in the ground is retarded. The rain water though held in top sand layers for
some time, giving rise to luxurant vegetation, is ultimately lost by evaporation.
In the Nagarparkar area, where the conditions are, different and rain fall is more,
the run off water could be conserved by diverting it over the adjoining lands and there-by
increasing the preserved, moisture of the soil.
In this, there are natural lakes near Surchand, Virawah and Sindhuri, which could
be converted into artificial basins for cultivation. The most-important lake is Sanghasar
near Virawah, which covers approximately 4 sq. miles, If proper embankments are
constructed the depression will be the biggest artificial lake in Thar.
In addition to above, there are about 45 tarais fed by rain water from Kalingar
hills of Nagarparkar. These could also be developed on the lines suggested for tarais in
the Thar area.
In arid conditions of the Thar and Kohistan region maximum and minimum
temperature difference is 40° F or some time even more and therefore there is
condensation or heavy dew, which at times reaches 1/16" to 1/4" but this evaporates
within a few hours of bright sun and is most insignificant factor in ground water
discharge. However, it probably helps certain desert and Kohistan species to survive.
We should always talk with caution about wind mills. In their home country i.e.
Netherlands, they have disappeared very fast between 1920 and 1950. Hardly 7% to 8%
of those existing in 1920 have survived. These have been protected by the efforts of
society for preservation of wind mills, which in turn is being helped by Government, and
the National Tourist Bureau. The wind mills have ceased to be economical as compared
to diesel or electric power. Most of the wind mills in Holland, Denmark and other
European countries were huge monsters having diameter of 100 feet, and stood on
massive towers of the height of more than 60'. With the highest wind velocity, at the best
they could develop only 20 H.P. Such structure, if constructed now, will cost Rs.
1,00,000. Though the maintenance cost is negligible, still it cannot be considered as
economical as a diesel engine, which will at the most cost Rs. 7,500 initially for the same
H.P.
For some time, it was thought that wind mills will possibly become extinct, but
the new development in wind mills in desert zones of Australia, again revived interest in
them. In the fifties, wind power research organizations were established in most of the
advanced countries. Even Government of India in 1952, established a Wind Power
Research Committee to carry put surveys and to determine the most favourable areas.
The advantages of wind mills are their comparative simple construction, freedom in
choosing the location, and in the most in-accessible place, the problem of transport of oils
and greases, which will be needed for other types of power units, is completely solved.
The main disadvantage is the unpredictability of wind, even in the very windy places
there is no certainty that it will blow sufficiently strong, for power production at a
particular time, when it is needed the most. This is more important, if wind mill is used
particularly for agricultural purposes. In most of the areas where it is sufficiently windy,
the windy season may not coincide with the time when crops need the maximum water.
This limits the use of wind mills for irrigation.
In Hyderabad division, there is a belt of high wind velocity, where the velocity at
times reaches even 30 miles per hour, but this velocity is limited to a few hours annually.
On an average, 10-12 miles per hour may be considered a good figure for reasonable
period during the year. This high wind velocity zone is roughly bounded by two parallel
lines, one passing through Shah Bunder, Mithi, and extending to Rajisthan desert, and the
other passing from Karachi to Hyderabad and going into the desert beyond Chhor.
This belt is shown in Map. No. 13. In this zone the following important stations
are located:
Outside this zone in Nawabshah, they have an observatory which shows a wind
velocity of 15 miles for 200, 10 miles for 1800 and 5 miles for 3200 hours annually. The
Indian Meteorological Department has an observatory at Jodhpur. The wind velocities
there, for different months in the year, are given in the table No. 2 below. It shows that
wind velocity of more than 5 miles per hour exists during most of the hours of the day,
and more than 10 miles only during the month of June, July and August for only a few
hours daily. For Jodhpur, therefore one has to design a wind mill of wind velocity
between 5-7 miles per hour. It seems that wind velocity decreases from Karachi to
Jodhpur, but is between. 5-7 miles per hour at Jodhpur itself for most of the time.
Considering the figures of Jodhpur, Nawabshah, Chhor, Hyderabad and Karachi (see
tables No. 2,3,4,5 and 6), one can safely assume that the wind velocity of approximately
12 miles per hour will exist for over 2,000 hours in most of the desert area of Hyderabad
A thorough analysis of the output of the wind mills has been made. The H.P.
developed by different size wind mills is so small that their utility for agricultural
purposes on large scale has to be ruled out. They could only be used for kitchen-gardens
or a few acres only. The table No. 7 gives the H.P. developed by different size slow speed
wind mills of comparatively good design at different wind speeds. The table also gives
the gallons pumped per hour against average head of 100 feet. It may incidentally be
mentioned that a cusec of water is equivalent to 22,500 gallons per hour.
As mentioned above, the average wind velocity in the wind belt area in
Hyderabad division is about 12 miles, at which the H.P. developed by 18' wind mill will
approximately be .337 to .59 . If we build a wind mill
of bigger diameter, say 25', the H.P. developed will
approximately be twice as much i.e. one H.P.
Fig No. 10
Wind Mill
SLOW SPEED WIND MILL AND
STORAGE TANK
(Suitable for wind belt zone of
Hyderabad division shown in Map No. 13.)
TABLE NO 3
MAIN FREQUENCIES OF WIND VELOCITIES IN VARIOUS
RANGES BASED ON SIX HOURLY OBSERVATIONS
Station: KARACHI
Months 0 1-3 4-6 7-10 11-16 17-21 22-27
January 235.2 159.6 96.0 189.0 54.0 12.0 0.6
February 241.8 144.0 78.0 156.0 18.6 9.6 0.6
March 210.6 162.0 78.6 179.4 89.4 19.8 1.2
April 157.8 130.8 94.2 198.6 118.2 16.8 2.4
May 70.8 97.8 94.2 261.6 175.2 41.4 3.0
June 38.4 71.4 81.6 292.8 169.8 52.2 10.8
July 30.6 49.8 68.4 279.0 231.6 71.4 11.4
August 31.2 49.8 67.8 358.2 190.2 42.0 4.2
September 71.4 79.2 105.0 280.8 162.0 18.0 1.8
October 294.6 120.6 79.8 189.0 52.8 6.0
November 316.2 126.6 86.4 162.6 25.2 1.8
December 269.4 181.8 93.6 169.8 29.4 1.2
Total (Annual) 1968.0 1373.4 1023.6 2716.8 1316.4 292.2 36.0
IN KNOTS
PER HOUR
January 188.4 326.4 106.8 115.2 7.8
February 215.4 295.8 91.8 60.0 4.8 0.0 1.2
March 207.6 324.0 105.0 96.6 13.2 1.2
April 160.2 226.8 122.4 163.2 43.2
May 62.4 136.8 136.8 298.8 96.6 15.0
June 16.8 90.0 108.6 271.8 190.2 36.6
July 56.4 85.2 97.8 258.6 190.8 51.6
August 75.0 103.2 107.4 298.2 141.6 17.4
September 122.4 151.2 120.0 233.4 76.8 11.4
October 298.4 234.6 102.0 103.2 6.6
November 296.4 309.6 66.8 35.4 3.6
December 207.6 318.0 136.2 78.6 3.0
Total (Annual) 1907.0 2601.6 1301.6 2013.0 778.2 133.2 1.2
TABLE NO 5
MAIN FREQUENCIES OF WIND VELOCITIES IN VARIOUS
RANGES BASED ON SIX HOURLY OBSERVATIONS
Station: NAWABSHAH
Months 0 1-3 4-6 7-10 11-16 17-21 22-27
IN KNOTS
PER HOUR
January 544.4 253.2 88.8 48.0 7.2
February 363.0 187.8 65.4 56.4 6.0
March 304.2 263.4 85.2 67.8 22.2
April 264.0 207.6 90.0 180.2 26.4 1.2
May 166.2 192.6 151.2 178.2 44.4 9.0
June 63.6 116.6 153.0 261.6 104.4 18.0 1.2
July 103.8 121.2 146.4 301.2 69.6 1.2 0.0
August 118.2 151.8 171.0 233.4 64.2 3.0
September 202.8 254.4 132.6 115.2 13.8
October 324.6 237.0 94.2 84.0 4.2
November 408.6 223.8 64.2 23.4
December 394.8 231.6 81.6 34.8
Total
(Annual) 3258.2 2441.0 1323.6 1584.2 362.4 32.4 1.2
IN KNOTS
PER HOUR
January 378.6 162.0 112.8 82.8 6.6 1.8
February 338.4 168.0 94.8 55.2 14.4 3.6
March 296.4 187.2 120.0 106.8 24.6 4.8
April 206.4 168.6 159.0 141.6 40.2 3.0
May 79.2 121.8 157.2 273.6 99.6 11.4
June 37.2 84.0 112.8 326.4 135.6 20.4 0.0
July 39.6 83.4 136.8 307.2 151.8 25.8
August 102.0 108.6 139.2 300.0 84.0 9.6 1.2
September 156.6 157.8 178.2 184.8 42.0
October 357.6 232.2 90.6 58.8 4.2
November 441.6 194.4 57.0 26.4
December 460.8 180.6 60.6 39.6 1.8
Total (Annual) 2894.4 1848.6 1419.0 1903.2 604.8 80.4 1.2
TABLE NO 7
PUMPING RATES AND H.P. FOR DIFFERENT DIAMETERS OF WIND PUMP 9WITH 100 FEET HEAD0 OF AVERAGE EFFICIENCY
The quantity of water pumped by wind mill varies indirectly as the water head.
When the water table is 44', a 25' wind mill may be able to pump 1/8 to 1/6 cusec of
water which is the output of a Persian Wheel". A 25' diameter wind mill, including a
pumping unit, a 60' tower and installation, may cost approximately Rs. 20,000. The
annual recurring cost on maintenance etc. may not exceed even 1%, but even then, it is
not worthwhile having such a costly unit to produce only one H.P. During the course of
the year, the wind velocity goes up from 16 to 20 miles per hour for 700 hours only,
when we may get an approximate output of 4 H.P. from the same. It is doubtful if any
private party will be willing to purchase such a unit, and therefore, its use on a large
scale, at least in settled areas of Sukkur and G.M. Barrage, may be ruled out. Wind mills
of smaller diameter, say 10' to 12', cost only 1/4th as much, and may be utilized for
kitchen-gardens and domestic purposes etc. Their output is limited to a few gallons per
minute and can suit any individual for these purposes.
In Thar desert area, where conditions are altogether different, where water is
available at depth of 150' or more, and where people from all over bring cattle for
drinking water at appointed places, wind mills with storage tanks may be of considerable
help in small towns like Chachro, where approximately 5,000 souls reside, and the water
requirement including that of their cattle is approximately 50,000 gallons per day, three
or four wind mills of 25’ diameter may solve the town's water supply problem. Similarly,
if wind mills are installed on open wells in the desert area, each may pump 12,000
gallons of water daily and may solve water problem in an area of 100 square miles, of
course depending on its human and cattle population at a given period. The total number
of wind mills required in the wind belt zone will be 120, if installed on wells and at an
approximate distance of 10 miles from each other.
There are two types of wind mills, the slow speed and the high speed. The slow
speed wind mill operates after the wind velocity reaches 5 to 6 miles per hour, and. will
keep on operating upto 20 miles or so. If the wind velocity increases beyond this, the mill
changes the direction so that there is impact of only 20 miles component. The high speed
type will operate only in high wind velocities. It does not rotate till the wind speed
reaches 15 miles or so. This type of wind mill is out of question in the wind belt existing
in Hyderabad division, as we do not have high wind velocities for sufficiently long time.
The high speed wind mill is still in the experimental stage in all advanced countries.
When properly developed, it may compete with diesel power in windy areas, but its
application in Thar area is ruled out due to low wind velocities.
In the Thar desert, at some places in the wind belt, water is available at the depth
of 150'. Sand hills some times are even 300' high. If a wind mild is erected on a hill, say
150' high, the water table will be 300` below the point of installation, and therefore, the
advantage gained by erecting a wind mill on the top, of the hill wilt be off-set by
spending extra power on lifting the water through a greater height. In the Thar desert,
wind mills should be erected in the plains rather than on the hills. The valley between the
hills, in fact, has the wind passing through it in the same manner as water would pass
through the cutting at high velocities. Since the pumping unit is directly attached to the
wind mill, it has to be erected over the well. It has also to be ensured that the well
supplies enough water, so that the pump does not operate dry. The well on which the
wind mill is erected, has therefore to be scientifically built, and in case the water strata
are shallow, horizontal tunneling, (Ref. Fig. 11) must be done to increase the water-
supply. With each wind mill, a tank has also to be built to store water. Water, being
costly and scarce, can not be allowed to run waste.
Fig No. 11
It has been suggested that wind mill should drive a compressor or an electric
generator with storage batteries so that electric power or compressed air is used for
pumping, whenever water is needed. These devices are more costly than the directly
coupled pumps, and off-set all the advantage in favour of wind mills as against
complicated power units and diesel engines etc.
Pumping sets 1 to 3 H.P. for lifting small quantities of water by a small diesel
engine through large heads are very costly to maintain. The over all pumping cost with
these units will probably be the same as with a wind mill. Wind mill therefore should be
preferred to small pumping units in desert areas, where the water head is very high say
100' or more.
However, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, recently in their Bulletin No. 217
(salt tolerance of field crops) published in March, 1960 have given salt tolerance of
various crops, which is reproduced in Table No. 8.
UNESCO in their publication "Utilization of saline water" has given the tolerance
salt contents suitable for irrigation, which is reproduced below:-
TABLE NO. 8
SALT TOLERANCE OF VARIOUS
CROPS
Tolerant Moderately tolerant Sensitive
Electrical conductivity of soil 8 to 12
milliohms per CN at 25º C (One milliohm
is usually equivalent to 640 per million of
salts in solution)
Barley (grain) Rye (grain) Field beans
Sugar beet Wheat (grain)
Rape Oats (grain)
Cotton (upland) Sorghum (grain)
Sorgo (Sugar)
Soybeans
Sesbania
Broadbean
Corn
Rice
Flax
Sunflower
Castrobean
The tube wells and open wells will again be of four categories. (a) Alluvial plains type,
(b) Kohistan type, (c) Thar type, and (d) Nagar Parkar type.
(i) Tube wells:—Tube wells with average discharge of 1.5 to 2 cusecs, shall be 125’-200’
deep, with 6" filter and a 20 H.P. diesel engine, or a 15 H.P. electric Motor. Cost with
diesel engine, pumping set and pump house etc. Rs. 17,500; and with electric operated
sets including a pump house etc. Rs. 10,000 (Refer Fig. 12).
(iii) Open wells with filters: Total depth 30'-40' filter of 6" diameter. The cost will
be as under:—
Fig No. 12
Where electric power is available, it will be cheaper to use electric motor instead of diesel
engine.
In case of electric pumping unit:
(1) Open Well Rs. 2,500
(2) Drilling and filters Rs. 500
(3) Electric motor and pump etc. Rs. 1,500
Total Rs. 4,500
(iii) Open well without filters with 1/8 cusec discharge and Persian wheel or flow
pump:—
The discharge of an open well with filter and pump will be 1/3-1/2 a cusec, and that
without filters only 1/8 of a cusec.
Fig No. 13
(ii) Open Wells. 58'-80' deep with 15 H.P. Diesel pumping set are recommended.
Cost will be as under:—
(1) Open Well Rs. 7,500
(2) Diesel engine with pumping set etc. Rs. 7,500
Total Rs. 15,000
Same cost as that in the alluvial plains: Rs. DIAGRAM OF A DEEP-WELL TURBINE
17,500 Discharge: I to 1.5 cusecs. PUMP
Recommended for areas where water table is
However, in Nagarparkar, test boring on a large
deep or draws down is excessive. Suitable for
scale is necessary before tube wells may be Kohistan and Thar Desert areas,
There are a number of springs in the rocky zone, which could be classified as:—
Fig No. 15
When open wells and tube wells are put in the rocky area the springs and karezes
will dry up gradually. It will therefore be a wise policy to give up development of
springs, karezes water galleries in favour of wells and tube wells. It need not be
emphasised here that the quantity of water that can be tapped from wells will be many
times that from springs and karezes.
In the upper portion of Kohistan i.e. Larkana and northern Dadu districts there is
no agricultural land in the mountains and therefore the best area for development shall be
sub-montane tract. In Kachho area, because of thick clay layer at the top and deep water
table, harnessing of ground water by any method other than deep well turbines will be
difficult. In such cases if ground water is available in sub-montane tract, it could easily be
pumped out and brought to Kachho by streams.
There is another good reason for developing the land at the foot of hills first
because the salinity of ground water will rise progressively as one moves away from the
rocky zone.
In the zone shown as unsurveyed in the Kohistan area the rocks are usually of
lime-stone. Lime-stone has fissures and cracks through which water circulates. If this
stone is- covered with dis-integrated vegetative growth the latter imparts CO² to rain
water which helps dissolution of salts. If the rocks are bare, and not decomposed the rain
water which takes CO² only from atmosphere in very small quantities, is just incapable of
dissolving rock salts beyond depth of .003" and therefore fresh ground water can be
expected in Khirthar lime-stone ridge or the Laki lime-stone. The chances of getting
sweet water in the unsurveyed zone therefore need not be ignored.
The analysis did not cover very coarse sands, gravel, very fine sands, clays and
silts etc.
From the information collected, it was found that in the sweet water zone created
by seepage from river Indus and its branches, the sand was of medium class in almost
60% of cases and fine in 40% of cases. The coarse sand or gravels were met only
occasionally and in thin layers. By experience of the first five years (1953-58) work, it
was seen that almost all tube wells with coir rope filters had failed in this area, and
therefore we recommended brass filters, with 0.016” and 0.010” slots for medium and
fine sand strata. These required gravel packing, but since the biggest size bore we could
drill with hand rigs was 10", we could only give a gravel pack of 21” or 2" by putting 5”
or 6" filters. The gravel was 1/8” to ¼” size. This worked alright, as only one tube well
failed during the, last 5 years due to filters getting colgged with sand, but this also was
reclaimed later on. We knew that the question of filters had raised controversy elsewhere,
but since these functioned well for us, the work of evolving better and cheaper filters was
left to other organizations (Ref. fig. 16 for gravel packing).
The only exception to medium sand was in Kaachho area i.e. west of Kamber,
Khairpur Nathan Shah and Johi Talukas along the Sind Hollow, where clay layers at top
some times were as thick as 60'-70', and down below thick gravel was not an uncommon
feature.
In Jacobabad District near Thul, the sand met with was of coarse or even of very
coarse type, and therefore in a few cases, no gravel packing was done. Surprisingly
enough none of these tube wells pumped out any sand.
It has therefore been concluded that in the plains of Hyderabad and Khairpur
divisions, the centrifugal pump tube wells will prove to be the most ideal and economical.
To increase the discharge beyond, 1.75 cusecs, firstly one has to go deep, and as we go
down, salinity increases and quality of water becomes poor. Secondly, by pumping more
water, draw-down or suction heads increase, and therefore the power required to lift
water is more. Thirdly, the ordinary centrifugal pump has to be replaced by a deep well
turbine, and these pumps can not be lowered in 6" filters. In other words, we have to put
bigger bore, say 14'' to 24", which would need power drilling rigs, and not ordinary hand
drilling rigs. Lastly, the capital cost of deep well turbine tube well, shall be Rs. 30,000 to
Rs. 35,000, as compared to 16,000 to 17,500 for ordinary centrifugal pump tube wells.
The figures about recharge rate are not available, though the April and September
water table difference is about 6'. The porosity of medium sand we encounter is about
30% to 35% which means that about 2 cusecs of water are seeping in the ground per sq.
mile, and this quantity of water can therefore be pumped out without lowering water
table, which is already high in these areas.
As regards salinity, it is the experience that as one goes away from the present bed
of Indus, the salinity keeps increasing. A number of bores were drilled in Tando Allahyar
Taluka near the old bed of Indus (bed prior to 1758). Even in this case, salinity kept on
increasing as one went further from the river bed, and after going 6 to 7 miles away, the
salinity exceeded, and the tolerable limit.
This evidence further suggests that the ground water is due to seepage from the
river Indus. By pumping ground water, therefore, the chances are that the river water will
replenish it during the high flood period. Therefore pumping more than even two cusecs
may not affect the area adversely.
The open surface wells built in the area are very defective in their construction.
The brick lining is laid in mud plaster, which is not really any binding agent, specially in
presence of water, which.; spills , all over on the walls, due to the use of Persian wheels.
Some of the wells are near water-courses, and water from the latter seeps into them,
causing weakening and caving in of the formation all around. These wells can not yield
adequate quantity of water. The open wells must be laid in cement mortar, and should be
taken at least I0-15 feet below the top sand, which is usually impregnated with impurities
like silt and clay. At present, 2" to 2½" diameter filters are being put in these wells. 5"-6"
filters instead of small filters, which soon get clogged, will be better. The filters should be
put as deep as possible.With these improvements, one can easily pump 1/3rd to 1/2 cusec
of water from the wells, but if the wells are not laid in cement, the chances of caving in
and the collapsing of wells on pumping more than 1/4 of cusec are almost 95%.
All the 800 bores drilled were by hand or power percussion rigs. They are slow
but accuracy of method cannot be denied. At every 10', water and soil samples were
taken. In many cases analysis was done by chemical section at Tandojam, at our own
request, but in the cases where land-owners got the analysis done on their own, the results
were not supplied to this section. It is therefore difficult to give the detailed logs -and
salinity data for each of the wells. A few representative data are however attached in
Appendix I. One thing was clear that salinity increased with depth. This gives another
justification for not going very deep but instead put in shallow tube wells of 1.5 cusec
capacity and between 100' to 150' deep.
It may be admitted here that we had intention of fixing Ca, Na, Mg, CI2 CO3 SO4
and HCO3 from the beginning and no such analysis was done, specially due to lack of
facilities and the cost involved. Detailed analysis has definite advantages, specially when
salt contents exceed 1.200 p.p.m. but salts may not be injurious to crops. However such
occurrences are comparatively rare.
DISTRICT JACOBABAD
A number of tube wells have been installed in Thul Taluka, which is in the
shallow sweet water zone. On pumping, it was found that one of them after three years
showed salinity of over 1400 pp.m. The tube well was shifted to another site. It was noted
that the tube wells were in proximity of Nasir Wah and Unar Wah which have been
flowing for over 250 years and have diluted the water down below in limited pockets. It
has been concluded to put not more than 70' deep tube wells in this area.
Another tube well near Abad (R.S.) in brackish water zone showed sweet water
when installed. This well was worked 22 hours daily during the dry season. At the end of
May, salinity increased to 1200 ppm, but in November when pumping was re-started,
salinity fell down to original level. The location of tube well is only one furlong from
Noor Wah constructed by Mian Noor Mohammad Kalhora 250 years back. Even in
brackish water zone, water in shallow depths is sweet due to continuous irrigation of rice.
After conquest of Sind, John Jacob found that water in Jacobabad town was brackish and
therefore he constructed a tank for city water supply. Today there are a large number of
Gharhi Khairo is another place in the district, where water is sweet upto the depth
of 200' or so. The western branch of Indus has always passed through Ghari Khairo and
so has the drainage channel of Bolan and other rivers of Balochistan. Nothing could be
said about the capacity of the reservoir but it should be substantial.
In Kashmore Taluka, specially near northern area, water is brackish in all bores.
This is probably the under ground drainage area of the Bugti hills to the north, which
contain brackish water.
SUKKUR DISTRICT
In Sukkur district a tube well, approximately two miles south of Sultan Kot to a
depth of 125' in shallow sweet water zone, showed salinity of 1150 ppm. This tube well
is in proximity on the course number 3 of the western branch of the river Indus (Chapter
V). This well was bound to go brackish, and therefore the land owner was advised to go
only 70-80 feet. In the same district, in the neighbour-hood of Sukkur town, within a
radius of approximately 2-3 miles, it is not advisable to put in tube wells more than 100'
deep, as down below we may encounter the lime-stone of Rohri hills or water drained by
them.
LARKAA DISTRICT
In Larkana district, in the areas shown as un-surveyed to the west, there are
dhands (Lakes) and rain-fed rivers. The famous plataeux of Daryaro and Kutte-ji-Kabar
are also in this area. The area requires thorough investigation.
KHAIRPUR DISTRICT
In Khairpur district one tube well was installed, near Sorah, on the old bed of
Eastern Nara. Its water is sweet because of nearness to Nara. A shallow tube well 80 feet
deep, near village Bagodero in Khairpur district, also showed sweet water. It was
possibly due to proximity with Nasrat branch, which one time was bed of river Indus;
later on an inundation canal and now a part of Rohri canal system.
HYDERABAD DISTRICT
In Hyderabad district, only in the upper portions, consisting of Hala Taluka and
some parts of Tando Allahyar and Hyderabad Talukas, water is sweet. This has been
shown in map No 10. On the fringes of the belt, some tube wells have been installed,
specially near Tando Jam. The salinity of these tube wells keeps on increasing gradually
However in the centre of the area, there is no rise of salinity even where the tube wells
are 200 feet deep. It is concluded that on the fringes, heavy pumping may turn the water
saline. A few bores at Matiari specially, close to the river, showed high salinity. This is
Some tube wells were put in Tando Mohammad Khan near the bed of Phulleli
canal. One of these turned saline after some time. If any tube wells are to be put near
Tando Mohammad Khan on the banks of Phulleli, they should be shallow. In case of
deep wells, the danger is that they will quickly get saline. The bifurcation of river before
1758 took place between Tando Moharnmad Khan and Shaikh Bhirkio. Since then
Phulleli has been flowing through the same area. It is therefore concluded that in the area
bounded by Tando Fazal, Shaikh Bhirkio and Tando Mohammad Khan shallow tube
wells of less than 70' depth may supply water fit for irrigation.
THARPARKAR DISTRICT
In Tharparkar district, two tube wells installed at Government fruit Farm, supplied
good water, but in the rest of the surrounding area, even in the town, water is brackish.
The Eastern branch of river Indus passed near Mirpurkhas, on which once flourished the
famous Kahu-Jo-Daro. The water at the fruit- farm may have been sweet because of the
proximity of the old course. Since the rate of pumping at the farm is limited, there is no
reported increase in the salinity. Two shallow bores at Umerkot and Nabisar showed
sweet water. The reason for this is that they were near the bed of Eastern Nara, one time
the mighty Hakra River.
A number of wells around Diplo showed sweet water suitable for irrigation at
depth of 50-60 feet or some time more. They could be exploited for irrigation. During the
visits, a number of wells between Naukot and Nagarparkar via Mithi and Islarnkot
showed potable water. This water in a few cases was analysed and though apparently
potable, had high salt content. Besides, the supplies of water were in-adequate. The
potable water wells have been marked on the map of Tharparkar district.
THATTA DISTRICT
In Thatta district, there are no chances of getting sweet water in the plains. Five
test bores were put in Kalan-Kote Lake in 1957. The lake has always remained a source
of water supply for Thatta town. It was at one time probably the bed of a branch of the
river. Though the lake may have dried up only occasionally during the last 600 years, the
ground water is brackish, even upto a depth of 150'-200'. Below this level there is rock. In
the rocky area of Thatta district, there are chances of tapping sweet water in Loki, Nari,
and Gal formations.
SAGHAR DISTRICT
Study and exploration of ground water involves many sciences like geology,
engineering, geophysics, geochemistry, hydrology and mathematics. It is impossible for
one man to do just to the subject. The following notes discuss some important problems
and questions which have been raised since publication of first edition 5 years back.
The purpose of introductory chapters I to VIII was to give the reader a thorough
back ground of groundwater regime i.e. natural historical process representing individual
stages of its formation proceeding under the sum influence of interacting and changing
factors consisting of climatic, hydrological, geological, soil, biogenic and artificial, in the
Lower Indus Basin. These chapters interested many readers. It was therefore felt that
further work must continue to satisfy growing questionnaires.
It was in this contest that study of ground water regime of Nara canal and its main
branches Jamrao and Mithrao was undertaken as conditions controlling its existence,
climate, size of catchment, discharge had not changed in about century.
Kacho is considered more unpredictable. In general for whole hilly range there is
actually no limit to historical outlook, and whenever time changes of water regime are
discussed, one is forced to leave the present past and traverse into the geological times.
Hither to artificial factors were not considered but pumping of ground water in
certain areas has either improved or deteriorated the quality of water.
Unfortunately the farmers have kept no records of long term fluctuation of ground
water of their tube wells. The Engineering Section of Agricultural Department is not
adequately staffed to check this up periodically and to study, the ground water regime.
The ground water temperature beyond the depth of 60’ is nearly constant
throughout the year and in no case variation during the year is more than one degree.
Temperature of ground water at Tandojam is 84° Advantage of this can be taken for
heating or cooling the houses if located close to the-tube well. The fluctuations in
atmospheric temperatures have no effect on water table.
The gravel of Khirthar range is unsuitable for packing around the filters as it
contains soluable lime-stone and invariably clogs them in course of time. The gravel from
Baluchistan hills is equally unsuitable as calcium carbonate dissolves in water containing
carbon-dioxide. The gravel from Nagarparkar hill belonging to pre-Cambrian age is the
answer, but transport difficulties have to be solved. Another solution is basalt layer on top
of Laki hills.
EARTH-QUAKES.
Seismic factors change the hydrodynamics and resilient state, thermal regime and
chemical composition of ground water and some times its occurrence and quality. Old
springs disappear giving rise to new due to joining and intermixing of various water
bearing strata. No measurements have been made, but earth quakes some times are
preceeded by rumbling noise in the wells and rise of water table which continues for
many hours even after the seismic shocks have subsided. At places wells can even run
dry temporarily or permanently. The formation of Allah Bund in Rann of Kuchh,
disappearance of fort of Sindhuri, appearance of a number of cracks in earth from which
Rann of Kuchh and lower Sind is in an active sesmic zone. History has recorded
following earth quakes in Lower Indus Basin.
2. 16th June 1819, A.D. earthquake in Rann of Kuchh was responsible for
destruction of Sindhuree, formation of Allah Bund, uplifting earth by 20' in the north and
depressing 10' in south along the vertical fault plain, which had width of 50 miles.
5. On 15th October 1895 A.D. area from Shah Bander to Tharparkar was affected.
6. On 14th January 1903 A.D. an earthquake caused fissures in Badin and Jati
Talukas and erruption of warm waters from beneath for 12 hours
8. Due to Earthquakes in Quetta and Sibi Kachhi plains shocks were felt in upper
Sind in 1909; 1928,1930, 1934, 1935 and 1960.
The earthquake can knock out tube wells more completely than an atomic attack.
Usually the casing string breaks into two parts and, the top portion is shifted by a few
feet. In 1964 in an earthquake in Anchorage city U.S.A., 60% of tube wells went out of
commission and in some wells the top string separated by as much as 10 feet.
Study of various courses of river Indus was done by reconstructing map of old
bed of river Courses based on aerial photographs and a map 7'X4' has been constructed to
study the regime over period of 5000 years Following factors were kept in view:-
1. Wherever river flowed in last 1500 years ground water is sweet, as there is
usually ni5 impermeable bed excepting in Sinjhoro Taluka where an impermeable clayey
strata of 100' was met. This strata seems to extend to Eastern portion of Nawab Shah
Taluka. ln such cases water is brackish.
3. Seepage to river bed from Kacha area occurs only in winter months, but this is
More so after construction of Sukkur Barrage.
This phenomenon has helped improving quality of water on the left bank above
the Barrage head. 15 years back the water near Miani forest was brackish, which now
keeps improving as pumping proceeds. Similar phenomenon is taking place about 6-7
miles north of Sukkur Barrage head-works.
5. The change in river level is transmitted to the ground water and table of latter
along the riverside experiences considerable instability, frequently amounting to, many
feet. This extends not only to Kacho but many miles out-side. Due to this, almost all
centrifugal tube wells in Guddu Barrage and Kacho area are being provided with two
foundations, one for high and other for low water tables.
6. Due to the same reason, not only the direction of flow, but rate of discharge and
chemical composition of ground water in these areas are subject to sharp irregularities.
The alternating discharging and recharging tends to improve quality of ground water.
7. The temperature of ground water in these zones does not remain constant, as in
remoter areas but varies, depending on the temperatures of river water and is higher than
other areas.
8. It was observed that rate of rise of ground water table in Kacho and adjoining
zones was not the same through out the length of river. The only plausible explanation is
that permeability of bed of river at some places is substantially inferior to that at other
places. No drilling has been done in the river-bed to verify this fact. Annual changes in
ground water table within the zone of river influence, under natural conditions not
disturbed by man, should in majority of cases be negligible, but due to artificial
irrigation, in whole of rice tract water table rises 8'-10' by end of October and falls down
to original level by about May, because of evaporation of water rising to the ground
surface due to capillary-action.
9. A question has always been brought up by tube well owners in rice tract that
though rates of precipitation, evaporation climatic conditions and delta of irrigation in
adjoining area were the same, the time lag between fluctuations of ground water table
varied. This happens due to increase in zone of aeration caused by thick or thin clay-loam
layer above the water bearing sands.
11. The salts on the surface of land in some areas were artificially leached down
in order to restore and improve fertility of the soil. Heavy dozes of such salts added to the
salinity of ground water. In general where the soil is saline mineralization of ground
waters during the irrigation at first experiences a sharp and continuous rise followed by a
reverse cycle. In some areas where soil is not saline the trend is towards reduction in
mineralization through desalination of soil and desalting of ground water by additional
layers of filtration.
Hydro-chemical studies have not been undertaken and probably they cannot be
justified.
In the first edition of this book little was discussed about water in upper reaches
of Nara canal above Jamrao head and impression was that ground water in area below
Jamrao head was definitely brackish. M/S Huntings do not seem to have put in any test
bore above Jamrao head. They however suggested that strata tap; streams of Jamrao head
were not suitable for tapping ground water. To verify the truth of this statement, we put in
40 test bores each 100' deep at distance of every two miles from Rohri to Jamrao head in
1967. The statement of M/S Huntings has to be reconsidered in light of these test bores
which showed that ground water in the first 22 miles (definitely due to nearness of
Eocene hills of Rohri and Kot Dijji) was brackish but beyond this point right upto Jamrao
head was sweet. The water bearing strata starts at depth of 50' and continues beyond 100'.
It consists of coarse sand and lime stone gravel. The width of sweet water belt could not
be checked but apparently it was ' more than couple of miles wide on either side of river.
The source of this water was seepage from Nara canal which has been flowing as
Perennial stream since. Fife opened it in 1859, more than 600 years after it had dried up.
Any water pumped from the ground will be replenished by Nara canal, which then, must
be supplied with extra water at suitable times to store it in the under ground reservoir.
The results below Jamrao head were equally interesting. Water on both sides of
Jamrao canal was sweet upto a point a few miles south of famous ruins of Mansura or
Bahamanabad. The sweet water column is more than two hundred feet deep near Jamrao
head and it tappers off slowly as one moves south wards to Sanghar where depth of sweet
water column was only 100 ft. Map number 14 shows sweet water Zone in the Jamrao
Mitharo command. This is an important finding since the first edition was printed 5 years
back. This map (based on aerial photographs) also gives old beds of river Indus and
Hakra on which flourished old capitals of Sind Patala, Bahmanabad Mahfuza and
Mansura.
North:— Dadu
Study of aerial photographs showed presence of three old beds of river which cut
through this area and they definitely are responsible for sweet water pockets. Map No. 15
shows sweet water area and the courses of river Indus in this small area.
In Chapter VII, general principles of ground water flow to and from river have
been discussed. Dadu and Sehwan Taluka show exception to this rule. The ground water
level here is above the average level of the river Indus. The ground water therefore
continuously seeps towards the river. If this process is allowed to continue, the brackish
water belt of Kachho and Western Dadu and Sehwan Talukas will push out sweet water
in the river and the present narrow sweet water belt adjoining to the river will also turn
brackish. Pumping out of the brackish water can reverse the process.
Arab geographers had mentioned that Indus passed through Alore gorge in 10th
century but this statement is not accepted by geographers and scientists, who consider
that the Alore gorge is too narrow to allow the whole volume of river water or even
substantial part of it, through its gorge and therefore only a small stream could have
passed through it. Study of aerial photographs tells a different tale. There are at least two
very prominent old beds of Indus above the gorge, which must have discharged its waters
Well defined course of Indus as it existed in the first half of 17th century has been
rebuilt on the information of Hisamud-Din Rashdi's recent publication of Tarikh-i-
Mazahar Shah-Jehani, supplemented by the records of East India. Company's factories in
Sind between 1635-1662 A. D. A situation of political confusion and economic
uncertainly lead to the most indispensible writings, which show that:-
Bakhar was an island between two banks of Indus, the right one of which had not
eroded the gorge completely upto present barrage head works and Many boats were
wrecked by invisible cliffs projecting beneath the water. Sukkur had not gained
importance sand was eclipsed by Rohri.
Pat was no longer on the left bank and had lost its importance, its inhabitants were
Khawajas' new converts to Islam.
South of Pat River was following more westerly course upto Sehwan. It touched
Talti town which was on left bank and proceeded southwards upto northern outskirts of
Sehwan, where it looped around the town to the east and touched Laki Hills. River had
west-warded to these hills before 1592 cutting off old land route and making it necessary
for Mirza Jani Beg to cut a route through the hills. This route through the hills still forms
part of main road between Kotri and Dadu the other portions of road were abandoned
only a few years back. Present Villages of Khabroth, (near Sehwan) Sukhapur (in Talti
Tappa) and Bhutra ( near Sehwan ) which also existed then, were on right bank. On the
opposite bank were villages of Daulatabad (possibly Daulatpur), Deh Shaikh Momah
Lanjar and Saidan Karach. Other Villages mentioned are; Babri on the right bank which
has survived upto now. Kaka village now in Dadu District was on left bank then, and was
a well known Pattan. Mandeji was a river port on the right bank just two miles south of
Sehwan.
Tappa Lakhat was on left bank, but still included in Sehwan Sarkar indicating that
change of course was comparatively in more recent times then, and old administration
was still governing the areas. Lakha village was on the left bank of river then.
Nasarpur was, on left bank and so were Vinjhar and Said ,Garh, all three of which
were fortified. The last has survived as a small village and Nasarpur has lost much of its
importance.
Kalri was still branch carrying the main water of river, leaving Thatta on left
Bank. Kalan-kot was already in ruins. It was then that Sain Dina a Hindu hearing of
Mirza Ghazi Beg's death, rebelled, crossed the river near Thatta and moved through hill
country towards Sehwan.
Puran the Eastern branch of Indus was then called Sankra, a word on which
Raverty was to lead a controversy 250 years later.
ARTESIA WATERS:-
Due to lack of the means communications in the rocky zone where the artesian
conditions are met with, large scale study hither to has not been possible. Forecasting
levels of artisian wells is important for water supply. Western hilly region is rich in
springs. Of all important springs Indo Pakistan sub-continent recorded by Geological
Survey, this area contains about 70%. Many of less important springs have not been
recorded. After Blanford (1874-77) no survey has been done. Some springs give
substantially high discharges. The one in Ranikot yields about 5 cusec of water even in
the driest part of the year. This spring probably was main source of supply to the
occupants of fort in its hay days 1600-2000 years back and continued to remain so during
various periods of its occupation till last century. Most of springs including this one, yield
water fit for irrigation and some irrigation is being carried out on them.
Wells in the whole region show arteisian condition i.e. water table in the casing
pipe rises as drilling proceeds. This is only 2-3 feet in the Indus plains, but in Kachho,
Thar and Pat it is some times a few score feet.
Where the arteisian conditions are responsible for free flow of water above the
ground or rise in level of water is high, rational controlling of discharge rate will help in
reducing the expenditure on pumping. In such cases it may be economical to install a
small pump and run in it for longer time or vice versa.
In non-perennial areas the canals act drainage channels, and carry water which in
most case is suitable for irrigation but is not being utilized for Rabi crops. Pumping of
these waters will further induce the seepage and save lands adjoining the canal banks
from possible deterioration. In low lying areas where canal bed may be high; this water
may seep into the lands even in winter and may possibly make them totally unfit for
cultivation.
Belts 50'-200' or more in width along the banks of canals and distributaries
invariably show lenses of desalined waters, over lying brackish water. This water usually
has same composition as irrigation water differing from latter only by its high sulpher
content due to decomposed organic material.
FORESTATIO:-
Forests prevent the rise of ground water and thereby prevent salinization of soil.
Forestation done along the canal banks in a narrow belt promotes lowering water table
along in this belt.
The construction of dam on rivers causes two kinds of filtration, first under the
dam always under-pressure, other along the bank on up stream side usually free of any
pressure. The other infiltration sooner or later merely by passes the dam and discharges
back into the river on the tail side as shown by diagram below:-
In case of Sukkur Barrage head works, there are hills on both banks. Those on
right bank extend to a few miles only and infiltration has already taken place. Water
along the foot of these hills to a width of about 2-3 miles is still brackish but pumping
can definitely desaline the water. On the left bank the situation is much more
complicated. Rohri and Kot Dijji hills are interconnected and infiltration if at all possible
will be to the Eastern Nara at point many miles below the head works.
Though the area has not been examined, in the opinion of writer there appears
impervious layer between the two.
In case of Guddu Dam the two banks are not impervious and the infiltration can
easily establish. On the right bank will water is brackish. Infiltration will definitely
change its quality. Pumping brackish water can induce the process,
Immediately after construction of the dams ground water table on the down stream side is
depressed which is slowly counteracted by infiltration. Some times the process takes
many years. It is possible to make forecast of phreatic back water development by
various methods of calculations if co-efficient of filtration, saturation deficit and amount
of rechange by percolation due to irrigation or rainfall are first worked out.
The method so far used by the Department of Agriculture is based on pH. value
and total soluable salts. This gives general picture but in some case can also lead to
wrong conclusion. For example It was seen that water around Shikarpur has a low value
of total soluable salts, but these salts were of harmful nature, containing bi-carbonates
which will have adverse effects on soil. The detail analysis and period i.e. study of
ground water, to find changes in composition will help in:-
(a) Finding the laws which govern the quality changes chronologically and
positionally (time & space)..
(b) Influence of artificial irrigation, canals, rivers springs and other acquifers on
water from wells.
(d) Determining whether pumped out water could improve or deteriorate soils or
has tendency of converting white alkali soils into black ones etc.
(ii)Water that stands in open surface wells or even casing pipes for long times
suffers the same process as discussed in (1) above. Besides there is reduction of sulphate
which results change of ions of magnesium, calcium, carbon dioxide etc. In open surface
wells evaporation tends to increase percentage of salts. The water samples therefore
should be taken after sufficient pumping or bailing out. Before collecting sample at least
twice as much water should be pumped out, as the total water content in well or casing
pipe.
(iii) Chemical composition of water column in the same aquifer varies with depth.
In case where soil over lying the water is not thick enough, there is evaporation of water
due to capillary etc. and top portion of aquifer therefore to will have higher
(iv) The lower Indus Basin emerged from sea due to silting up by the river Indus
in recent geological and even historical times. The water in the lower strata is of sea
origin and upper water have been diluted by water percolating from the river. This has
given rise to sweet water only in upper strata and it keeps getting more and more saline
with depth. Water below 600' depth in the whole area is brackish. Sweet water depth
varies depending upon when the river, visited the locallity last and time period it flowed
at that point. In most of sweet water zone shown in map No I, fresh water is available to
depth of only 200'.
(v) In a few cases when water was stored in bottle some portion of consisting of
magnesium, calcium, and iron salts precipitated. In such cases both water and precipilates
were subjected to analysis.
(vi) Even the glass of bottle can dissolve in some waters resulting in formation of
silicic acid.
There are special methods for preservation of water samples, but they can only be
handled by a scientific personnel and therefore these are being left to specialists.
Ground water contains no suspended material and is free from bacteria. It is clear
and colourless in contrast to surface waters which are usually turbid and coloured and
contain considerable quantities of bacteria. But it always contains salts in much higher
proportion to surface water and therefore for various applications following factors
should always be kept in view:-
(i) When total dissolved solids are less than 500 p p m water is generally
satisfactory for domestic use and many industrial purposes. Water with more than 1000 p
p m of dissolved solids usually contains enough of certain minerals to give it dis-
agreeable taste or make it unsuitible for industrial and domestic uses.
(ii) Corrossive action of minerals in water increases with salt content. At 1000 p p
m the water becomes good conductor of electricity and since corrosion is electro
chemical action it is accelerated at a high rate.
(iii) Ground water in this region being associated with lime-stone hills contains
dissolved calcium and magiessium, bi-carbonates, sulphates, chlorides and nitrides,
which give it hardness and are cause of incrustation discussed further in the book.
(v) Water containing more than 350 p p m chlorides is objectionable for irrigation.
For drinking and domestic purposes limit is 250 p p m. At 500 p p m it has disagreeable
taste. Cattle can tolerate 3000 p p m of chlorides occasionally.
(vi) Nitrates in water usually are not related to geologic formations. The nitrate
built up is from various sources like plant residue animal waste, seepage of fertilizers in
the soil, sewage wastes, manures, barnyards and urine etc.
Water containing nitrates may be tasted for presence of bacteria. For domestic
purposes water with more than 45 p p m is undesirable. Water containing 90 p p m is
toxic for infants. It does not precipitate by boiling. The only solution is distillation.
(b) Sulphates.
(g) Silicates.
(j) Maganese.
(k) Free gases like carbon dioxide, oxygen, hydrogen, sulphide, methane.
SCALE OF pH VALUES.
Distilled water has pH of 7-pH-8 has 1/10th hydrogen ions of distilled water and
pH 9 1/100th of hydrogen ions. Some way pH-6 has 10 times and pH-S has 100 times
ions of distilled water.
pH value of water samples stored for some time decreases due to absorbtion of
carbon dioxide if it is below 7. When pH value is already above 7 it further increases due
to absorbtion of carbon dioxide.
pH values of less than 7 are met in humid areas like East Pakistan. In the lower
Indus Basin pH values between 7 and a little over 8 have been encountered. Only at one
place in the whole region- in wells near Virawah in Thar desert pH values of between 6
& 7 were met. This small area is a bridge which has made Nagarparkar islands a
peninsula. It seems that rain water from Thar desert and Luni river, rich in atmospheric
carbon dioxide percolates into the ground giving it acidity. On the same analogy pH
values of less than 7 can be met all along Rann and Thar border.
OXYGE
HYDROGE SULPHIDE
SODIUM
Sodium does not produce any hardness, Sea water contains more than 10,000
parts of sodium. However it increases pH value of water if is in form of carbonate and
bicarbonate.
Sodium+
SAR = ______________________________
_______________________
√ Calcium++ + Magnesium++
_________________________
2
Where SAR is Sodium absorption ratio the equivalents for 3 ions are:-
These have to be multiplied by total ppm of each mineral and SAR worked out.
In England and U.S.A. a maximum 570 ppm are tolerated for human use. World Health
Organization considers 1500 ppm as excessive and not desirable as potable water. In Thar
Desert people have been drinking water having more than 5000 ppm and definitely with
ill effects on health. In Kohistan waters vary from place to place in their salt content. As
the life is nomadic and there are no permanent settlements people are exposed to highly
mineralized water danger. Development of ground water can reduce nomadic conditions
and its hazards.
Mandatory
Recommended limits for
Disolved Chemicals maximum rejection of
in Water amounts in ppm water in Ipp
1962 1962
1946 Standards Standards 1946 Standards Standards
Iron 0.3 0.3 - -
Manganese - 0.05 - -
Nitrate - 45 - -
Detergent (ABS) - 0.5 - -
Copper 3 1 - -
Arsenic - 0.01 0.05 0.05
Fluoride - 1.7 1.5 3.4
Lead - - 0.01 0.05
Selenium - - 0.05 0.01
Silver - - - 0.05
Narium - - - 1
Cadmium - - - 0.01
Chremium - - 0.05 0.05
Cyanide - 0.01 - 0.02
Magnesium 125 50 - -
Zinc 15 5 - -
Chloride 250 250 - -
Sulphate 250 250 - -
Chloroform-soluble
Extract - 0.02 - -
Phenol 0.001 0.001 - -
Total disolved Solids 500 500 - -
Dairy cattle can tolerate water upto 3,000 p p m. Sheep can stand higher salt
content provided water with 7000 p p m is used in emergencies only. The Kohistan and
Thar waters fall with in the limits.
KOHISTA AREA
Since 1964, a number of wells and tube wells have been installed in Jhimpir and
Wahi Pandhi areas. Recently there is heavy demand in Kachho of Johi Taluka. The
In both Jhimpir and Wahi Pandhi, luckily large tracts of Agricultural land are
available which could be used for suitable crops and vegetation and water could be
sprayed over the area by diverting specially from Kolu river whose waters go-waste into
Kalri lake.
Main difficulty in using flood waters for recharge is often their suspended load of
silt which when deposited soon reduces in filtration capacity of ground. There are special
methods to treat the water before being lead into the wells.
THAR AREA
One way of facing the problem is by using G.I. (zinc coated iron) pipe. Zinc
protects steel in two ways. Where coating is continuous and unbroken it prevents direct
contact of steel with water, but if coating is broken, current passes from zinc to iron i.e.
zinc is corroded or sacrificed first to protect iron. This continues till nearly all zinc is
consumed, and then iron will start eroding.
(b) Dissolved oxygen, which is usually present in shallow waters makes it acidic.
(d) if total soluble salts are above 1000 ppm water is highly corrosive even if pH
value is high.
(e) More than 50 ppm of dissolved carbon dioxide make water corrossive.
(g) Combination of any two or more of above in fewer quantities will make it
corrosive.
(a) More than 300 ppm of carbonates causes deposition of calcium carbonates.
(b) Iron content of more than 2 ppm will cause deposit of Iron.
(c) If manganese content is more than 1 ppm pH is high and there is oxygen
present, magnese is precipitated.
BACTERIAL DEPOSITS.
The methods used for treatment of corrosion and incrustation are mechanical and
chemical. As for as possible mechanical methods should be avoided, primarily because
no coir rope filter can stand surges produced mechanically and the brass filters have only
li"-2" gravel packing which will give away due to surging or jetting. Chemical treatment
will be the easier and best result can be expected. A large number of chemicals both dry
and liquid are used for the purpose. Of these hydrochloric acid is easily available in
Pakistan. As used in the wells it has strength of about 28%. The acid is placed uniformly
in the filter, over its whole length for about six hours and then it is either surged in
mildly, before pumping out, or is pumped out without surging. Other acids recommended
are Suphanic acid (not sulphuric) and hydroxyaccetic acid which are comparatively mild
and are allowed to remain inside filters for 24 hours. To burn bacteria chlorine gas in the
form of sodium hypochloride is added.
When silt and clay plug the screen, the most suitable material is sodium
haxametaphosphate, a highly soluable chemical which does not dispurse clay but breaks
it into small particles which become easy to remove by pumping. When using cleaning
chemicals wells close by should be shut down for best results.
III. RECORDS
Except for a few farmers, no well logs and well records are being maintained. The tube
wells are bound to develop some other trouble which could be diagonised after the case
study. Some countries have enacted laws making it compulsory to provide useful data.
Though there is no compulsory to maintain records in Pakistan, still it is in the
individual’s interest to preserve the following information on a chart. A copy of it should
preferably be framed and kept in pump-room.
Once the data on tube wells in a particular area. are collected and compiled, a
valuable public service is provided to aid water development and control. In fact such
data was the basis of first edition of this book.
Later on M/S Huntings technical services Ltd. collected similar data for their
investigation. Though the data available then was for 1000 test bore spread over , some
52,000 sq. miles, yet the approach was scientific and the book and its ground water map
has stood test of the time. However the data available by end of 1963 were not adequate
to prepare vertical salinity maps. Agricultural Engineering Organization now has cell in
each district to provide advice on ground water based on data so far collected.
(a) Size of bore- By doubling the diameter the discharge can be increased only 5-
10% but life can almost be doubled.
(b) Larger diameters reduce the velocity of water at the slots and therefore sand
does not pass through the filter.
(c) Shallow tube wells, even if provided with adequate slot area to reduce
velocity, still have high draw down as compared to deep tube wells having same slot
area. The increased draw-down consumes more power, increases running cost, puts more
loads on the pumping equipment, and reduces its life.
(d) If a tube well has low yield, the cost per unit of power in terms of capital
investment and operating, cost are higher than a high yield tube well.
(e) High yield tube wells have greater draw-down. But even these wells are
cheaper per unit of water delivered as compared to two or more tube well giving same
total discharge.
(f) High capacity tube wells are pumped for less hours thus the staff for field
irrigation is reduced considerably.
(g) Private drilling contractors have been putting tube wells at much cheaper rate
than Department of Agriculture, but they use inferior type filters, shallow depths short
screen lengths, smaller diameter pipes and pumps, and no gravel packing, resulting in low
yield. The capital cost per unit of water and operating cost of the contractor's tube wells
are much higher.
(h) Centrifugal pumps are more popular, due to low initial cost, portability and
adoptability to any motor or engine. Since their suction is limited to 15' and there is draw-
down of 6'-7' per cusec of water, the centrifugal pumps under no circumstances can yield
more than 2.to 2.5 cusecs of water from a tube well. The average discharge of a tube well
for this region is only one cusec. Deep well turbines on other hand though initially costly
and require large diameter bore, can yield 3-4 cusecs easily from 250' deep tube well and
will prove much economical. It has been observed that due to inferior construction the
draw down in contractor's tube well is very high with the result than they yield less than a
cusec for full draw-down of l5' in many instances.
The deep well turbines could only be lowered in large size casing pipes. They will
necessarily need power drilling equipment for well installation and therefore centrifugal
(i) Coir rope filters which are main source of trouble and are singly or doubly
wound, in fact have very small slot area, which causes water to pass through it at a high
velocity and consequently making it possible for sand to pass. Even if sand does not pass
small slot area causes high frictional losses coir rope used in these filters cannot be
precisely spaced and this again results in flowing of sand through the strings. The coir
rope filters have reinforcing rings and strips of iron bars or flats on the inside which
reduce the total slot area. In other words the effective slot area is much reduced.
Contractors invariably fit in Coir-rop filters as they are comparatively inexpensive.
(j) The contractors to cut down expenses and to avoid trouble of making strong
foundation have been installing pumps many feet above the water level. In Guddu
Barrage majority of tube wells installed by them have pumps some 8'-10' or more above
water table. These tube-wells hardly yield 1/2 .cusec of water.
(k) Twin-bore or multi-bore tube-wells are used where water is sweet in shallow
depths, for what is called skimming of sweet water. The frictional losses in this type of
arrangement due to large number of bends and fittings are heavy and this system should
never be adopted where sweet water column is reasonably long.
(l) Contractors do not use metallic filters and in case these are used gravel packing
is not done. With gravel packing the effective well radius extends up to exterior of
annular packing and therefore frictional losses are reduced considerably.
(m) The cost difference between tube well installed by the contractors & the
government agency is hardly Rs-2000-2500, but this amount can be recovered within a
year's time on saving in operational cost and high yield.
In Southern Zone in past 5 years some failures were reported and remedied. The
type and nature of failures were:-
Almost all these failures could be traced back to some or other fault with filters.
Filter occupies the same status in a tube well as heart in human beings.
Unfortunately the filter is not assigned proper status and care by the owner. Following
types of filters are in use.
1. Coir rope filters, in which coir is wound on steel cage in a single on double
turn, in fact have very small slot area and the coir strings are not uniformly wound. Once
a sand particle passes through the winding, it being abrasive acts like a saw and cuts the
string, resulting in pumping of sand and finally in failure.
2. Brass filter with slots varying from 008" width to 016" width and gravel packed
to about two inches all around.
Little is known that most of troubles with metalic filters are caused by gravel
available to West Pakistan tube well owners. The gravel is cause of formation of hard,
brittle, cement like deposit around the slots, choking them partially or completely. The
formation of this type is known as incrustration. Water always contains some free carbon
dioxide which has been absorbed by it from atmosphere when it falls either as rain or as
snow in northern hills. The carbon dioxide mixed with water forms carbonic acid which
can easily dissolve lime stone. The gravel we use in West Pakistan is not free from lime
stone. Except Nagar-Parkar hills and some formation in Kohat-hills rest of the rocks in
West Pakistan contain lime stone in one or other form. This gravel dissolves in the water
while latter passes through it. When this water reaches at the slots, the pressure on it is
reduced. Due to reduction in pressure held carbon dioxide is released leaving the mineral
salts (Calcium salts ) which precipate and deposit at the slot in a thin sheet. This process
is known as incrustration.
Once incrustration develops chain reaction starts. The pump keeps sucking
quantity of water through less opening area in the filters. This means greater velocity at
the entrance of slot, which accelerates release of still greater qualities of carbon dioxide
and more incrustration results.
Little is realized that gravel we use for packing around the filter is so dangerous.
Gravel from NagarParkar or Kohat-hills or Basalt layer on top Khirthar range can solve
the problem.
3. Steel filters. They have slot width of 1/16 " to 1/8" and because of larger slot
area per inch of circumference a small length of filter is to be used. They have however to
be given a gravel pack of 6" or more around them. In addition to incrustation they suffer
from corrosion and oxidation.
4. Plastic filters having slot widths of a few thousand to 1/8" can be available.
Plastics in general suffer from age hardening and unless they are thoroughly tested their
use cannot be recommended.
RECLAMATIO OF FILTERS.
With the increasing number of tube wells, certain failures of filters due to corrosion and
incrustation were, reported and filters had to be removed. It is not possible to salvage coir
rope filters, but metallic filters being costly have to be extracted. Two methods are
commonly employed:-
The method is very defective as almost any screen that has been in place for a
period of time is certain to be set very tight in the formation. The pulling force is not
uniformly spread over the screen length and hook usually straightens out.
In this method a good quality pipe of smaller diameter with a sack attached
securely to the lower and is lowered up to the bottom of filter and annular space filled
with sand to about 2/3rd of total length. The upper end of small pipe is then jacked up
slowly.
Care has to be taken that sand is uniformly poured, the pulling pipe sockets well
screwed and sacking consisting of 2' — 4' wide strips tightly secured. It will be preferable
to have a socket at lower end of pulling pipe to avoid slipping of sack. The pulling pipe
should approximately be 50% of diameter of filter. Same arrangement could be used for
pulling out casing pipes.
In the lower, Indus valley the sweet water column lies above the brackish zone. The tube
well screen therefore does not penetrate upto the bottom of aquifer but is kept much
above it. Such a well is called-partial penetrating tube well. The specific capacities of
such wells are much lower- than fully penetrating wells. In other words discharge for the
same draw down is much less. This increases the pumping cost. In addition to this there is
very serious disadvantage, that it will suck water from lower strata and in time the tube
well will supply brackish water.
Fig. below gives profile of partially penetrating well how it pumps brackish water.
Fig No. 18
The problem could be solved by having the screen divided into shorter lengths
and alternated with blank pipes. Figures 19 and 20 below give the pattern of reducing the
convergence of flow.
VALVE TROUBLES
Frequently foot valves give trouble due to leakage of seals and priming becomes a
major and serious problem. When the pump is shut off water column in the delivery pipe
due to gravity, falls down with impact causing leakage of seals.
(i) The draw-down of a tube well increases with the time it is in use. This is quite
obvious that full cone of depression cannot be established immediately on starting tube
well but will enlarge as water in the vicinity is pumped out. To reach full draw-down it
may take about 120 hours or more.
(ii) A test was carried out on 750 gallons per minute discharge pump. The draw
down kept increasing and in 24 hours reached 14 feet but by that time the discharge had
started falling down. At end of 48 hours the draw down was 16 ft and discharge had
decreased to 710 gallons. The tube well was shut down for 48 hours and rate of recovery
recorded. It did not recover fully and there was residual draw down of 2 feet i.e. the water
In hot weather and during closure of canals, many tube wells are worked
continuously for some days. The discharge during the period falls down by 10 to 20
percent or more depending on the design of tube-well. There should be no cause for
alarm and process should be considered normal. If after a few days rest the well does not
recover fully and still give less discharge, other causes of low yield May be investigated.
In different places all over the world land Subsidence due to removal of ground
water is reported. Most alarming report is about Mexico City. Same phenomenon is going
to take place here. Almost in all tube wells sinking of tube well floor, cracks in pump
room pit and walls (for centrifugal pump type tube wells) and setting of foundations are
noticeable. In few cases the pipe filter string has sunk and some times filters have broken
and detached themselves from the top line. If large scale tube wells are installed for
municipal needs, damage to drainage and sewage system, roads, pipe lines, bridges and
buildings cannot be avoided. This occurrence was first noticed in Kazi Ahmed while
over-pumping from open surface well, which caused not only caving in of well, but also
cracking of adjoining bungalow. Since then care is being taken to put tube wells
sufficiently away from houses and other structures.
When large scale pumping is done in big area it will always be accompanied by
subsidence of land surface.
It is beyond the scope of this book to go into the details methods of drilling. In
brief they are:-
This method has limitation, as to diameter of the bore. It is not practical to drill
beyond 10" diameter with this equipment as labour requirements become excessive. The
great disadvantage, of method is that filter diameter is limited to about 6" and adequate
gravel packing cannot be done. This reduces the over all life of the well. Due to lack of
power drilling rigs, know-how to operate them and difficulty in their mobility, hand rigs
form the major part of drilling equipment in the country.
They are as slow as hand drilling rigs and in rocky area the progress on the
average is 6' per day. For rocky areas they are still the most economical machines. In the
plains hand drilling rigs can compete with them fairly well except when large diameters
are to be drilled.
They are fast operating machines and in soft formations of the Indus plains can
drill 200' daily. Their chief advantage is larger diameter, and speed. In rocky areas they
are slow unless costly tools (diamond and rock bits) are used which make the operations
uneconomical as compared with percussion rigs which are more suited to rocky
formations, conglomerates and boulders.
Their main application is 40”-60” diameter bores in soft formations. They are
much faster and cheaper than ordinary rotary machines, when larger diameters bores are
to be drilled. If larger diameter and gravel packing are aimed! at method b, c, and d, have
to be resorted to.
As straight percussion or rotary these machines are very useful but in combination
they are cumbersome, difficult to transport, and change over from one system to other.
They will also require operators with better skill to handle the two systems of drilling
efficiently.
Typical cases of deaths occurring in open surface wells and karazes while
cleaning them are reported periodically. This is attributed to presence of certain harmful
gas like carbon dioxide or hydrogen sulphide arising from decomposed organic matter or
even the exhaust fumes from pumping engines. The gases are detected by lowering a
lamp or torch, in the well and are removed by stirring up the air by some means, usually
umbrellas.
Quick sand seen in movies or read in novels, usually swallowing evil characters,
is no fable or myth. It is some thing real and mighty dangerous. I encountered this
material in Thar Desert of Sanghar district. I was informed that the swampy areas
swallow men and animals during a particular part of year only and rest of time they turn
into hard ground or water pool. According to stories current locally it was said, that
during Hur movement of 1941-42, the Hurs used quick sand as strategic move, against
the troop who had no knowledge of deadly traps scattered all over.
(a) quick sand is caused by water rising upwards due to some pressure, through a
layer of fine sand and lifting action of quick sand was 1-1/7 times that of water. In
Tandojam bore water column in the pipe was 78' and water table was at 22'. The sand
rose by 68' clearly showing that rise of sand was by 1 divide by 1 1/7 times that of water
column.
(b) If the flow of water upwards (under pressure) is stopped sand is no longer
quick. The quick sand in Thar is caused by seepage of water from near by lakes under
pressure below the sand and when water in mother lake dries up or level of water in two
areas attains some height sand is no longer quick.
(d) Quick sand cannot exist where the water flow is large in volume or is under
high pressure. In such cases sand is usually washed away.
(e) Quick sand occurs in hilly country near springs. Its occurrence is rare in plain
country. In Thar it is connected with lakes located high in sand hills from which water
seeps in low lying pools, but its occurrence in such areas is comparatively rare and un-
common, specially after drying up of many lakes.
(f) Quick sand for all purposes is ordinary fine sand (.004 inches size ) and is in
no way different from it. It becomes quick as water under pressure passes upwards
through it.
(a) Filling the casing pipes with water. Since this water will be absorbed in the
strata below, water is pumped in continuously.
(b) If the water table is very high the casing pipe string is extended above ground
level to maintain water pressure in the column.
(c) Additives like drilling mud are added to this water to increase its weight.
Since in many parts of the Hyderabad district water bearing sand is of .004 in
size, it acts quick in at least 10% of cases. The filters used in such cases have slots width
of .008 inch and with gravel pack of a minimum of 2" thickness, they are able to retain
major portion of sand.
Strange phenomenon was noticed while tapping water from a well at Chhachhro.
The well 408 deep had two water aquifers one between 320 feet to 336 feet other 372' to
408'. While drilling the water table in case of 1st aquifer stood at 64 ft. When casing pipe
was further driven through 2nd aquifer it stood at 108 ft. This was not carefully taken in
view and when filters were lowered water table stood at 110 ft.
Only when on pumping the yield was poor the problem came for analysis. It
became clear that due to hydrostatic pressure differential water from aquifer I was
flowing in aquifer II. Solution lies in tapping one aquifer only.
This shall be normal pattern for most of wells in Thar area and some of deep wells
in Kohistan.
In order to watch performance of tube wells, in addition to biannual analysis of water, the
discharge should be measured and record maintained. For any noticeable variation
Agricultural Engineering section should be consulted. It is difficult for tube well owner to
install and maintain elaborate water discharge measuring equipment. Two very simple
though approximate methods are:-
(A) Measuring the discharge from height to which water rises above a
vertical pipe as shown in diagram below:-
Approximate flows (in imperial gallons per minute) for vertical standard pipes.
Height
(h)
inches Nomind liamentor of pipe inches
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1 1/2 21 43 68 85 110 160
2 26 55 93 120 160 230
3 33 74 130 185 250 385
4 38 88 155 230 320 520
5 44 99 175 270 380 630
6 48 88 190 300 430 730
8 56 152 225 360 510 900
10 62 112 255 400 580 1050
12 69 128 280 440 640 1150
15 78 175 315 500 700 1300
18 68 195 350 540 780 1400
21 93 210 380 595 850 1550
24 80 230 400 640 920 1650
Pipe Pipe
Diameter Multiplier Diameter Multiplier
(Inside) to be used (Inside) to be used
5.761" 27.2 10.136" 84
6.065" 30.2 10.250" 85.7
7.625" 47.5 11.750" 113
7.981 52 11.938" 117
8.125" 54 12.000" 118
12.090" 77.7 12.090" 120
12.250" 81.8 12.250" 123
(C) In case the pipe is not flowing full as shown in figure below, make use of
attached table.
Percent Percent
of pipe Correction of pipe Correction
filled factor filled factor
25 0.20 60 0.63
30 0.25 65 0.69
33 1/3 0.29 70 0.75
35 0.31 75 0.80
40 0.37 80 0.86
45 0.44 85 0.91
50 0.50 90 0.95
55 0.56 95 0.98
Gal
Submergence water Length
Lift below pumping per cu. of air
ft. level ft. Percentage Ft. of air line Rating
1 2 3 4 5 6
25 29 54% 4.55 54 Minimum
53 68% 8.34 78 Optimum
50 52 51% 2.5 102 Minimum
93 65% 4.35 143 Optimum
100 89 47% 1.43 189 Minimum
150 60% 2.7 250 Optimum
150 113 43% 1.05 263 Minimum
183 55% 2.04 333 Optimum
200 139 41% 0.85 339 Minimum
216 52% 1.54 416 Optimum
300 176 37% 0.6 476 Minimum
115 47% 0.96 566 Optimum
Size of
Size of well eductor
Pumping rate gpm casing pipe Size of air line
30 to 60 4" or larger 2" 1/2"
60 to 80 5" or larger 3" 1"
80 to 100 6" or larger 3 1/2" 1"
100 to 150 6" or larger 4" 1 1/4"
150 to 250 8" or larger 5" 1 1/2"
250 to 400 8" or larger 6" 2"
400 to 700 10" or larger 8" 2 1/2"
In the irrigated plains of the region there is no law or custom regarding water
rights. The ground water is plentiful and is governed by common law rule recognizing
ownership of ground water by the owner of overlying land. The number of tube wells as
yet in the area are too small to cause government intervention.
In certain area like Gudu command left bank, or Hyderabad and Halla. Talukas where the
number of tube wells is fast increasing; soon we will be confronted with question of rule
of reasonable use of ground water. Tube wells have their own cones of depression. If two
tube wells are located close together their cones of depressions may over lap resulting in
low discharge of both tube wells. The tube wells have therefore to be located sufficiently
apart so as not to interfere with each others performance. Under this doctrine also called
doctrine of correlative use the tube well has to be installed: in a way that interference
with neighbouring wells is eliminated. Under the conditions prevailing in our alluvial
plains the distance between two tube wells has to be about 1200' to stop any interference
what so ever. Below are some of values for the radius of cone of depression for various
formations:-
In Thar and Kohistan area the people by custom have water right in certain tracts.
In Thar it is not unusual for a man owning a well to earn a few thousand rupees for
allowing water to be lifted from his well for human and animal consumption. In Kohistan
the rule is not as rigorous, but there is strict right in case water is to be used for
cultivation. In absence of enactment of law the local administration has been respecting
customary or tribal law. When large scale development of ground water is under-taken,
the question of rights on water has to be settled in these water scarcity areas.
In Malir area when the underlying strata do not contain sweet water, people with
permission of revenue authorities have put in wells in the bed of Nallas or rain-fed
streams, where sweet and abundant water is available. Large scale permission of this
nature will cause water deficit and question of water rights will have to be settled legally.
Till such a situation comes up, the party in need of water must be encouraged.
In case of the plains there will be no question of control on ground water for
another 15-20 years. Water deficit will come up in Thar and Kohistan as soon as large
block of land is developed, but till area approaches full development the control and
restrictions should be kept to minimum.
(i) Slow speed wind mills are no longer able to compete with the diesel and
electric power and are practically vanishing in Europe where they are now being
subsidized by Tourist Bureau to attract tourist rather than produce power economically.
(ii) The initial cost per horse power developed for these wind mills is 10-20 times
those of slow speed diesel engines and 30 to 50 times those of electric motors.
(iii) They are used in desert areas of Australia to pump water for sheep which
move from place to place for grazing.
(iv) The wind mills cannot be relied upon as only source of power for irrigation
due to un-predictability of winds fluctuations and wind velocities. Some times non-
coincidence of wind with the time when crop need maximum of water.
(v) In Hyderabad Division there is High Speed Wind belt roughly bounded by two
paralleled lines one passing through Shah Bunder and Mithi and other passing from
Karachi to Hyderabad both extending to desert and to the Indian territory.
(vi) From the wind velocities at various places namely Hyderabad, Nawabshah
and Chhore it is concluded that the, average of wind velocity of 12 m.p.h could be
expected for about 2,000 hours annually and 15-20 miles for an other 700 hours in
Hyderabad Division. This wind will be available from April to October for longer hours
daily and for a few hours in winter months.
(vii) The H.P. developed varies as cube of wind velocity or a square of blade
diameter. At normal speed of 12 m.p.h a 25’ to30’ dia wind mill can develop only one
horse power. Looking to initial cost of about Rs. 10,000 for a 25'-30' wind mill it will not
be worth while to use it for irrigational purpose. A diesel engine costs about Rs. 300/- to
400/- per horse power and electric motor from Rs. 75/- to 100/-.
Its economic application for irrigational purposes therefore was out of question
except if supplemented by diesel electric or animal power.
(viii) Wind mills could successfully be utilized in the Thar desert area of
Hyderabad Division, for lifting water for human and cattle needs but again not for
irrigational purposes. The need for such installation is great as this could do away with
complete nomadic conditions and bring about settled life. No other pumping unit will be
so economical and low in the capital cost when the level of water is 100° or more.
This paper interested some commercial concerns. 1964 M/S Southern Cross of
Australia made offer to supply a wind mill free of cost for the trials. It was suggested to
The wind mill was received in 1965 and installation completed in October, 1965
but at that time the wind velocity was too low to give appreciable results. In April, 1966
the wind velocities rose sometimes to 20 m.p.h or even more and data were taken.
The Wind Mill was installed on an open surface well having diameter of 10' and
42' deep. The water table was maintained at 24' throughout the period of trials. This was
done by allowing the water pumped out to be returned back to well.
The measuring of discharge was done by a right angled V-Notch which was fitted
at the end of a tank 16' X 4' X 1'-7". The tank was divided in 4 compartments which were
connected by a regular hole. The water was discharging in compartment number I and
from there through compartment 2 to compartment 3 and then to compartment 4. This
arrangement made possible that in compartment number four water was flowing without
any wave action and the measurements at V-Notch were accurate.
Throughout the year pumping was done against constant head of 31-9". The
discharge pipe was 8’ -9” above ground and water table 23' below ground level.
The measuring of discharge was done by a right angled "V" notch, which was
fixed at end of the tank divided in 4 compartments. The discharge from "V" notch was
recorded continuously day and night at intervals of every 5 minutes for 3 continuous
years. This gave accurately the discharge throughout the day. From these readings, hourly
& daily discharges have been calculated & plotted on the graphs.
The average daily has been plotted on a separate graph and from this graph,
average discharges throughout the month and year have been plotted. As the Agricultural
Workshop had no facility and equipment for finding out the wind velocity, these readings
were taken from Agriculture College, Tandojam.
Since the distance between wind mill and college is about one mile, it is assumed
that there was no difference between wind velocity at the two places. The wind mill
tower was 60' high where as College wind velocity, was recorded at height of 10' only,
but this error was eliminated for all practical purposes. The readings taken for wind
velocity were at 8 hours, 14 hours and 18 hours i.e. 3 times a day, from this a
corresponding graph discharging in g.m.p versus wind velocity in m.p.h were plotted. On
the basis of this the wind velocity and discharges were plotted as on a graph.
(i) The maximum discharge occurs when velocity' of wind is 14 m.p.h and this is
80 g.p.m.
(ii) As the wind velocity increases, the automatic governing takes place, thus
smaller area of wheel vanes is exposed to the wind and the discharge decrease. The
governor is not properly adjusted and cuts off early' otherwise discharge could increase.
However we decided not to temper with original arrangements.
(iii) The average daily 'discharge throughout the year is 38 g.p.m i.e.
approximately 1/10 of a cusec.
(iv) The average quantity of water period available' during May to September is
51 gallons per minute or 0.132 (1 /8th) cosecs.
(v) During rest of months the discharge and quantity of water is below average
i.e., 29 gallons per minute or 0.075 (1/13th) cusecs and is intermittent and nor reliable::
(vi) The maximum wind velocity during the season reached to about 22 m.p.h, but
discharge was reduced to about 40 g.m.p., with proper adjustment of governor the
discharge could be increased to 1/2 cusec at this velocity.
From above discussion it will be seen that for half of the year i.e., during summer
the quantity of water available from wind mill is sufficient i.e. 1/8 cusecs. By proper
adjustment of wind mill it is possible to raise the discharge. But even it is 1/8th of cusec
for 6 months it can command about 12½ acres of land and since there are no recurring
costs the wind mill can successfully, be utilized in areas where water table is not more
than 25'-30' deep. In other areas the wind mill can supply water: for human and cattle
consumption only.
Discharge Lift in
in cusecs ft
20' 25' 30' 40' 50'
Horse Power Required
0.02 114 0.14 0.17 0.23 10.28
0.04 0.227 0.38 0.34 0.46 0.57
0.06 0.342 0.48 0.51 0.68 0.85
0.08 0.454 0.57 0.68 0.91 1.14
0.1 0.568 0.71 0.85 1.14 1.24
0.2 1.14 1.4 1.7 2.3 2.8
0.4 2.27 2.8 3.4 4.6 5.7
0.6 3.42 4.3 5.1 6.8 8.5
0.8 4.54 5.7 6.8 9.1 1.4
1 5.68 7.1 8.5 11.4 14.2
1.2 6.8 8.5 10.2 13.6 17
1.4 7.9 9.9 11.9 15.8 19.8
1.8 9.1 11.4 13.7 18.2 22.8
1.3 10.2 12.8 15.4 20.5 25.6
2 11.4 14.2 17 22.7 28.4
(a) Electric motors have efficiency of about 90% and they can be run continuously at
75-80% of rated out put.
(b) Diesel engines have mechanical efficiency of 80% and can be run at 70% rated
load continuously.
(c) In use electric motor do not loose power, but power of diesel engine falls to 50%
due to wearing of some components.
5. PUMP EFFICIENCY:-
6. PUMP CAPACITIES.
Size of
pump
suction Head
20 ft 30 ft 40 ft
Capacity in gallons and cusecs
Gls Cusecs Gls Cusecs Gls Cusecs
2" 187 1/2 150 3/8 95 1/4
3" 360 1 270 3/4 180 1/2
4" 540 1 1/2 400 1 1/2 270 3/4
5" 720 2 540 1 1/2 360 1
6" 1080 3 720 2 540 1 1/2
7" 1260 3 1/2 1080 2 5/8 630 1/3/4
8" 1440 4 1260 3 720 2
7. WATER REQUIREMENTS:-
A cusec of water flowing for twenty four hours in equal to 60x60x24 cubic ft. of
water i.e. 86,400 cubic ft. This is spread over an acre of land i.e. 43,560 sq. ft. will give a
water column of about 2' i.e. about 1" per hour. This may be remembered as thumb rule
for all practical purposes.
The tables below give useful information for those interested in depth of water
over different areas in different timings from different size streams of different
discharges.
8. DEPTH IN FEET OVER ONE ACRE FOR DIFFERENT STREAMS AND TIME
Discharge in Cusecs 12 hours 24 hours 48 hours 96 hours
Giving data about location, p.H. value, salt contents, depth, filter type and
discharge etc. of some representative tube wells.
Aitken, E. H.
"Gazetter of Province of Sind." Vol. A Karachi …..1907
Blanford, W. T.
"Geology of Sind". Memoirs of Geological Survey of India Vol. IX, Part II .....1879
Blanford,W. T.
"Geology of Western Sind". Memoirs of Geological Survey of India, Vol. XVII .. 1879
Blanford, W. T.
"Physical Geography of great Indian Desert". Journal of Asiatic Society of Bengal, Vol.
XLV, Part II 1878
Billimoria, . M.
"Ibn Haukal's account of Sind." Jour
Sind History Society, Part III……1938
Carter, G. De. P.
"Akaline Lakes and Soda Industry of Sind"• Memoirs of Geological Survey of India, Vol.
LXI, Part II, Delhi……. 1923
Chablani, S. P
"Economic conditions in Sind". (1592-1843 A.D.) Bombay:...... 1951
Cousens, Henry
"Antiquities of Sind" Calcutta ……1929
Desai, B. B.
"Survey report of area of Thar Desert Division''. ………1940
Fife, J. G.
"Report on Eastern Nara"…………1861
Frere, H. B.
"The India` Desert." Jour. Roy. Geology Society ....... 1870
Golding, E. W.
Wind Mills for water lifting and generation of Electricity on the farm F.A.O.
Rome….1960
Holland, Lt.-Col.
"Routes from Karachi." Bombay…………..1835
Hughes, A.W.
"Gazetteer of Province of Sind." (B Vol.) George Bell and Sons, London ……….1876
Ibn Battuta,
"Travels in Asia and Africa." by Gibb, London ………1929
Lambrick, H. T.
"Early canal, irrigation in Sind." Journal Sind Hist. Soc. Vol. III Part I, Karachi….. 1937
Lambrick, H. T.
"History of Sind." Sindhi Adabi Board, Hyderabad ……….1964
Mc-Murdo,
"Dissertation on River Indus." ……….1834
Meihzer, 0. E.
"Plants as indicators of ground water." Washington ……..1927
Mirchandani,
"Crow's account of Sind." Journal Sind His. Soc. Vol. I, Karachi ……..1934
earcohus, (Anonymous)
"Lost river of the Indian Desert." Calcutta Review ....................... 1875
Oldhman, C.P.
"Sarswati and the lost river of the Indian Desert," Calcutta Review ............ 1874
Oldhman, R.D.
"A probable change inGeography of Punjab and its rivers." Jour. Asiatic Society of
Bengal, Vol. LV Part II. .. 1887
Oldhman, R.D.
Thermal Springs of India." Memoirs of Geol. Survey of India, Vol. XIX Part II.. 1882
Piggot, Stuart
"Pre-historic India." Middlesex .... 1950
Pilgrim, G. E.
"Preliminary note on .a revised Classification of Tertiary fresh water deposits of India."
Vol. 40 Part III, Delhi 1910
Pilgrim, G. E.
"The Tertiary and Post Tertiary fresh water deposits of Baluchistan and Sind." Records
Geol. Survey of India, Vol. 37 Part III Dehli. 1908-1909
Pithawala, Maneck
"A Physical and Economic Geography of Sind." Karachi 1959
Pithawala, Maneck
"Historical Geography of Sind." Journal of Sind History. Society 1938
Pithawala, Maneck
"Sind's changing maps." Karachi 1938
Poston, Lieut.
"Report on Manchur Lake, Arul, Nara River." Jour. Roy. Asiatic Society 1840
Raikes, Captain S. .
"Memoirs on Thar and Parkar districts of Sind," Bombay ….1859
Sachau, Edward
"Al-Beruni's India." Vol. I, Lahore 1962
Senkalia, H. D.
“Indian Archaeology Today.” Bombay... 1929
Stain-Aurei, Sir
"A Survey of Ancient sites along lost Sarswati River," Geoge Jour. 9, No, 4 April
................... 1942
Symth, J.W.
"District Gazetters of Sind." Vol. I to VII, B-Volumes............... 1919-1920
Unesco,
"Ankara Symposium on Arid Zone." Hydrology." Paris. ... 1953
Unesco,
"Arid Zone Hydrology—recent developments." Paris ........... 1959
Unesco,
"New Delhi Symposiums" Paris ...... 1956
Unesco,
"Utilization of Saline Water." Paris …. 1956
Vrenburg,
"The classification of Tertiary system in Sind with reference to the zonal classification."
Rec. Geol, Survey of India. Vol. 34, Part III ........... 1906
Wadia, D. .
"Geology of India ……….1926
White Head, R. B.
"The river courses of Punjab and Sind." Indian Antiquary Bombay September 1932