Irrigation & It's Types
Irrigation & It's Types
1.
2.
3.
4.
Introduction.
Importance of irrigation.
Need of irrigation in India.
Means of irrigation:i) Well irrigation (Advantages and Disadvantages).
ii) Tube well irrigation (Advantages and Disadvantages).
5.
Canal Irrigation.
6.
Tank Irrigation.
7.
Need to conserve water.
8.
Need of water harvesting.
9.
Water shed management system.
10. River valley projects of India.
11. Conclusion.
12. Bibliography
Introduction
Irrigation may be defined as the science of artificial application of water to
the land or soil. It is used to assist in the growing of agricultural crops,
maintenance of landscapes, and revegetation of disturbed soils in dry areas
and during periods of inadequate rainfall. Additionally, irrigation also has a
few other uses in crop production, which include protecting plants against
frost,
suppressing
weed
growing
in
grain
fields
and
helping
in
surface
non-conventional
water
sources
withdrawn
like
treated
wastewater, desalinated
We need regular watering for our crops. The watering of crops is known as
irrigation. There are various means of irrigation used in our country. Some
of them are as follows:1. Well Irrigation: 1st paragraph on page 133. (In brackets and underlined).
Types of well irrigation: TXTBK
2. Tube well irrigation: A tube well is a type of water well in which a long
100200 mm (5 to 8 inch) wide stainless steel tube or pipe is bored into
the underground aquifer. The lower end is fitted with a strainer, and a
pump at the top lifts water for irrigation. The required depth of the well
depends on the depth of the water table.
Canal Irrigation
Canal irrigation in India is one of the principal methods used for improving the
growth of the crops. After wells and tube wells, canal irrigation is the second
most important irrigation source. However, this method is only extended to those
areas that are large level plains of deep fertile soil and are drained by well
distributed perennial rivers. That is why it is quite natural that canal irrigation
procedure is only limited to the plain areas of northern India, valleys of Indian
peninsular
plateau,
coastal
lowlands
etc.
perennial ones. In mitigating the miseries and sufferings of the farmers, canal
irrigation works have gone a long way. Every village in India has a pond or tank
for preserving the rain water. Monsoons have been really uncertain in the
country. In those areas where potable ground water is not sufficient like for
instance, the zones of Indian plateau, water is supplied from reserved dams. In
the past, irrigation works were small sized but with the passage of time, larger
canal
irrigation
projects
have
been
made
possible.
Water soaks into the ground under the bed of unlined canal. That is why with the
irregular supplies of water, level of sub-soil water in the canal irrigated areas also
rises. In some areas, where the perennial unlined canals flow at the ground level
and between raised high banks, it is quite possible that the water might reach
the surface and render the cultivable soil entirely waterlogged. In India, canal
irrigation
is
important
in
various
states
and
canal
irrigation
Pradesh, Tamil
holds
significance.
These
are
Bihar, Madhya
Pradesh.
However, every year more and more cultivated land is being made useless in the
canal irrigated areas.
Tank irrigation
Tank design
Water is considered a purifying and regenerative element in India, and is an
essential element of prayer and ritual. Water is also revered because of its
scarcity in western India where dry and monsoon seasons alternate and failure of
the monsoon season means famine and death while plentiful water replacing
irrigations sources is a time of rejoicing. This resulted in building water storage
tanks that combined the practical and sacred.[3] Since ancient times, the design
of water storage has been important in India'a architecture As early as 3000 BC
sophisticated systems of drains, wells and tanks were built to conserve and
utilise water. Tank building as an art form began with the Hindus and developed
under Muslim rule.[4]
An example of the art of tank design is the large, geometically spectacular
Stepped Tank at the Royal Center at the ruins of Vijayanagara, the capital of
the Vijayanagara Empire, surrounding the modern town of Hampi. It is lined with
green diorite and has no drain. The tank was filled by aqueduct.[5]
Village tanks
Ralegaon Siddhi is an example of a village that revitalised its ancient tank
system. In 1975 the village was drought-stricken. The village tank could not hold
water as the earthenembankment dam wall leaked. Work began with
the percolation tank construction by the villagers who donated their labor to
repair the embankment. Once this was fixed, the village's seven wells below the
tank filled with water in the summer for the first time in memory. Now the village
has a supply of water throughout the year.[6]
Temple tanks
Tanks known as "Pushkarni" or "Kalyani" also known as "Kund" in Hindi are
reservoirs with steps leading down to the water, generally found in South India,
and sometimes constructed within the walls of a temple complex. [7]
Bathing in the sacred waters of a temple tank was believed to cure worshippers
of afflictions such as leprosy and blindness.[8] Many temple tanks are decaying
and drying up today.[9]
Stepwells