National Geographic - USA (2020-08)

(Antfer) #1
New
Delhi

Dongra
Nov. 1, 2018
Prayagraj
(Allahabad)

Bathinda

Lahore

Oct. 10, 2018
Seondha

Lucknow

Kanpur

Mari Mustafa

Amritsar

July 17, 2018
Jaipur

Ya
mu
na

Be

tw
Sin a

dh

Ke

n

Ch

am

ba
l
In
du


s

B Sutlej
ea

s

Ra

vi

Jhe

lum

Chenab

Ga
nge

s (^) (Ga
nga)
Gh
ag
ha
ra
Sambhar
Salt Lake
H
I
M
A
L
G a n g e s
(^)
THAR
DESERT
HARIKE BARRAGE
PANNA N.P.
NEPAL
PAKISTAN
INDIA
TIBET


RAJASTHAN


UTTARAKHAND

HARYANA

MADHYA
PRADESH

DELHI

PUNJAB

HIMACHAL
PRADESH

UTTAR PRADESH


JAMMU
AND
KASHMIR

LADAKH

50 km

50 mi
NN
Paul Salopek’s
walking route

Enters India
Feb. 27, 2018

Flood

Drought
Low

High

Low High

Vulnerability
in populated
areas

overpumped water tables are dropping by 40,
60, even a hundred feet in a single generation.
And the problem doesn’t end with supply. Pol-
lution in the form of industrial waste, urban
sewage, and agricultural runoff has poisoned
entire river systems. In total, some 600 million
people—roughly half India’s population—live
without enough clean water. Meanwhile, 20 mil-
lion human beings are born every year in India,
each requiring water to live.
I trek for nearly a year and a half across the
river plains of northern India. I plod over con-
crete highway overpasses, balance atop railroad
bridges, and sit on my pack in tippy canoes, navi-
gating river after river. There are hundreds. Each
one, according to Hinduism, is sacred—a deity
even. (The Ganges, or Ganga in Hindi, is a pale
goddess depicted with as many as four arms,
riding a crocodile.) The future of India churns
within their silty currents.
“Will there be a magic show?” ask the people
of the Thar.
Children skip alongside us, barefooted, laugh-
ing, squinting up against the desert sun. Sentinel
khejri trees throw pale silver shadows onto the

yellow ocher sands. The local wells are poisoned
by too much iron and fluoride.
Magic? Sure. Let us call it the grand vanish-
ing act.
On the burned flats around Sambhar Salt Lake,
in a dying wetland outside Jaipur, we spot hun-
dreds of ragged figures moving in the distance.
Hour after hour they walk backward, yanking
wooden rakes over the white plain. Women salt
workers. The quicksilver heat swallows up their
spindly legs, delivers them back again. Infernal
abracadabra. But it isn’t, really. It’s just us in a
waterless world.

The Indus: River of rivers
INDIA—FROM INDOS IN GREEK, derived from hind
in Persian, originating from the Sanskrit word
sindhu, meaning river.
Where is the fabled Indus—river of rivers?
Where can one locate this immensely long,
brawny waterway, born in the glaciers of Tibet—a
gigantic, supple, living, liquid entity whose basin
sprawls across nearly half a million square miles

CHRISTINE FELLENZ, NGMWHYMAP GWV, BGR & UNESCO 2015 STAFF. SOURCES: LANDSCAN;

Completed

AREAENLARGED

ASIA
Planned
route

Gray categories
are not found in
this part of India.
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