A. 625
B. 525
C. 725
D. 925
A. 987 kms B. 998 kms C. 1,087 kms D. 1,090 kms
the length of the river jelhum is about 379 miles the length of the river jelhum is about 379 miles
New Bridge: 994 meters Old Bridge: 1516 meters
Really big
The closest points are 2850 km (1768 mi) apart. From east of Bhutan to the most west islands of Japan. Between the east-most point of the Himalayas and Tokyo is about 4230 km (2650 mi). Centre of the Himalayas to the centre of Japan = ~5280 km (3280 mi) --- The Himalayas measure about 2430 km (1500 mi) in length... Japan covers about 2890 km (~1800 mi) in length... So you have to be more clear between which part of the Himalayas and which part of Japan you wish to measure.
It is a river in Pakistan and India originating in Himachal Pradesh, India. It originates in the Himalayas in the Chamba district of Himachal Pradesh following a north-westerly course and turns to the south-west, near Dalhousie, then cuts a gorge in the Dhaola Dhar range entering the Punjab plain near Madhopur near pathankot. It flows along the Indo-Pak border for some distance before entering Pakistan and joining the Chenab River. Its length is about 720 km.
It is a river in Pakistan and India originating in Himachal Pradesh, India. It originates in the Himalayas in the Chamba district of Himachal Pradesh following a north-westerly course and turns to the south-west, near Dalhousie, then cuts a gorge in the Dhaola Dhar range entering the Punjab plain near Madhopur near pathankot. It flows along the Indo-Pak border for some distance before entering Pakistan and joining the Chenab River. Its length is about 720 km.
Its under the Mighty Pir Panjal ranges of Himalayas in Jammu & Kashmir about 12 km in length.
The primary river of Pakistan is the Indus River, which begins in the Himalayas in Tibet and flows westward, then southward for nearly the entire length of Pakistan, ending at the Arabian Sea.
Indus basin: Indus & its five eastern tributaries -Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas & Sutlej mainly flow through Punjab (Punj=five, Ab=water(s)) after leaving the mountain phase (in Himalayas). After joining into the single River Sindhu (Indus) flows through Sind province in Pakistan & drains into Arabian Sea. With partition of India and concurrently 'Punjab', the agriculture that depends on the rivers and extensive canal network (largest such in the world at that time) demanded proper allocation of waters. 'World Bank' that arbitrated allocated Indus and the first two (Jhelum, Chenab) to Pakistan; India was given Ravi, Beas and Sutlej. In 1960s this came into force. Though both the countries (owner countries) have exclusive and total rights for consumption of waters of their (allotted) rivers, certain functions like navigation, hydro-electric power generation, fishing and non-polluting tourism can be practiced in the other territory (country), through which the river flows if the owner country permits so after showing that no water is diverted for agricultural use (except for drinking water). Brahmaputra (TsangPo in Tibet): It flows for more than half of its length in Tibet. There never was an issue on water utilisation (may be) till Chinese effectively took over Tibet. The river enters the plains phase in India, where agriculture on large scale is possible and practiced. But bigger problem was the enormous flood-control measures. There is no pact on sharing the waters. It is accentuated because Indian territory of Arunachal Pradesh at enormous heights is termed by Chinese as 'disputed'. No agreement can be reached now.
The elevation of the Pyrenees, a range of mountains located in southwest Europe, is 11,168 feet. The length of the range is 305 miles.
The Himalayas stretch for about 1,500 miles (2,400 kilometers) across five countries in South Asia: India, Nepal, Bhutan, China, and Pakistan.