these are the peninsular rivers:-
1)mahanadi
2)tapi
2)kirshna
3)kaveri
etc.
The two peninsular rivers that flow through trough are the river Narmada and Tapi .
Narmada and Tapi are the two Peninsular rivers that flow through trough. These are two large rivers.
Narmada and tap ti are the two rivers that flows west
Mahanadi and Godavari!
(i) Narmada(ii) Tapi (Tapti)
this is because they flow through i shaped valleys and the rocks of plateau are hard
There is a few differences in the East flow and the West flow of the river in the Peninsular Plateau. The East flowing rivers drains into bay of Bengal and the West drains into Arabian sea.
The rivers of Peninsular India are not suitable for navigation as they flow swiftly over the plateaus and highlands.The rivers in South India are rain-fed and dry up in the hot and dry season. The peninsular rivers of the south have their source in the Western Ghats and flow across hills making a number of waterfalls, which are not navigable, but provide Hydro-electricity.
The Rhone and Seine rivers flow through France.
The rivers of Peninsular India are not suitable for navigation as they flow swiftly over the plateaus and highlands.
It is a river that flows through the peninsular part of a country.( a peninsula is a patch of land covered by water on 3 sides and connected to a land on the 4th side)eg: River Krishna and Godavari in Southern India
The rivers Thames and Cherwell.
The drainage systems of India are mainly controlled by the broad relief features of the subcontinent. Accordingly, the Indian rivers are divided into two major groups:• the Himalayan rivers; and• the Peninsular rivers.Most of the Himalayan rivers are perennial. It means that they have water throughout the year. These rivers receive water from rain as well as from melted snow from the lofty mountains. The two major Himalayan rivers, the Indus and the Brahmaputra originate from the north of the mountain ranges. They have cut through the mountains making gorges. The Himalayan rivers have long courses from their source to the sea. They perform intensive erosional activity in their upper courses and carry huge loads of silt and sand. In the middle and the lower courses, these rivers form meanders, oxbow lakes, and many other depositional features in their floodplains. They also have well-developed deltas.A large number of the Peninsular rivers are seasonal, as their flow is dependent on rainfall. The Peninsular rivers have shorter and shallower courses as compared to their Himalayan counterparts. However, some of them originate in the central highlands and flow towards the west. Most of the rivers of peninsular India originate in the Western Ghats and flow towards the Bay of Bengal.
They are exotic rivers because they flow through an area in which precipitation is not enough to support their flow. They are maintained through the flow of water from shallow freshwater lakes, swamps, and marshes.