Luni River

The Luni is the largest river in the Thar Desert of northwest India. It originates in the Pushkar valley of the Aravalli Range, near Ajmer, passes through the southeastern portion of the Thar Desert, and ends in the marshy lands of Rann of Kutch in Gujarat, after travelling a distance of 495 km (308 mi). It is first known as Sagarmati, then after passing Govindgarh, it meets its tributary Sarasvati, which originates from Pushkar Lake and from then on it is called Luni.

Luni River
Sagarmati
Course of River Luni or Lavanaravi river, south of the estimated route of the ancient Sarasvati river
Location of the mouth of the river in India
Luni River (India)
Native name
Location
CountryIndia
StateRajasthan
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationPushkar Valley near Ajmer
  elevation550 m (1,800 ft)
Mouth 
  location
Gujarat
  coordinates
24°39′N 71°11′E
Length495 km (308 mi)
Basin size37,363 km2 (14,426 sq mi)
Basin features
CitiesBirami, Raipur
Tributaries 
  leftJawai River, Sukri River, Guhiya River, Bandi River, Liladi River
  rightJojari River

In 1892, Maharaja Jaswant Singh II of Jodhpur constructed Jaswant Sagar in Pichiyak village between Bilara and Bhawi of Jodhpur district. It is one of the largest artificial lakes in India and irrigates more than 12,000 acres (49 km2). It is one of the internal drainage rivers in India; it does not meet with Arabian Sea. It is drained before it reaches the Arabian Sea.

{{OpenStreetMap | lat = 26.52408 | long = 74.66082 | zoom = 3 | layer = standard }}

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