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Clues to ancient Kosi superflood say it could happen again today 

  • October 2, 2023
  • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
  • Category: DPN Topics
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Clues to ancient Kosi superflood say it could happen again today 

Subject: Geography

Section: Places in news

Context: A study led by an IIT Kanpur scientist has found that an ‘extreme monsoon event’ occurred around 11,000 years ago.

More about the news:

  • A team of geologists, including researchers from IIT Kanpur and the Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow, has undertaken a study to reconstruct ancient river floods in the Gangetic plain dating back 23 to 5 million years ago during the Miocene era.
  • They utilized sedimentary cores from beneath the Karnali, Ganga, and Kosi rivers to examine changes in sediment composition over time.
  • Surprisingly, they discovered that climate change-related events and seismic activities occurring today could result in super-floods that pose a severe threat to the population in the Gangetic plain.
  • This revelation underscores the need for an immediate overhaul of India’s disaster management strategy to account for “cascading hazards,” which refer to natural disasters triggered by other disasters.
  • The study’s origins lay in an unusual observation that older sedimentary layers contained large particles downstream from the usual gravel-sand transition point.
  • Investigating this anomaly led the researchers to the Mohand anticline in Uttarakhand, where they analyzed sediment layers to estimate deposition times.
  • Their findings suggested that an “extreme monsoon event” occurring every 200-1,000 years, combined with hyperconcentrated flows caused by triggers like landslides, could result in catastrophic floods.
  • The increased likelihood of extreme monsoons and landslides due to climate change poses a growing risk to regions prone to such events.
  • The study advocates for an integrated disaster management approach that considers the interconnectedness of earthquakes, landslides, and floods to better mitigate these complex cascading effects.
Clues to ancient Kosi superflood say it could happen again today Geography

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