Chinnar River

The Chinnar River originates in the Annaimalai Hills below a grassy pass between the hills Kumarikkal Mala (8,275 ft) and Kaladekatti Malai In Idukki District, Kerala state South India. The 18 km long Chinnar river defines the East-West Tamil Nadu/Kerala state boundary along the northern edge of the Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary and the southern edge of the Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary. Several adult Crocodiles were reported in the Chinnar river in 1992.[1]

Chinnar River
Chinnar river and Pambar river merge to become Amaravati river
Location
CountryIdukki District, Kerala, India
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationAnamalai Hills
  coordinates10°19′N 77°06′E
  elevation1,829 meters (6,001 ft)
Mouth 
  location
Amaravati River
  coordinates
10°21′2″N 77°14′14″E
  elevation
473 meters (1,552 ft)
Length18 km (11 mi)
Chinnar river from SH 17 border bridge between Tamil Nadu and kerala

Route

The river first proceeds through a large shola then past the Muthuvar settlement of Olikkudi [2] at 10.331°N 77.1435°E / 10.331; 77.1435. There is another small village #2 at 10.3553°N 77.1839°E / 10.3553; 77.1839. There are Kerala and Tamil Nadu border checkpoints on either side of the river where a SH 17 road bridge crosses the river at 10.35241°N 77.21775°E / 10.35241; 77.21775. 2 km east it is joined from the south by the Pambar River at Koottar where a comfortable tree house accommodation is available.[3] Here it crosses into Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary in Tamil Nadu and becomes the Amaravati River.

Tributaries

The river is joined by a small stream from the south at small village #2. 2 km east of the NH 17 road bridge the river is joined from the south by the Pambar River at Koottar. The western part of the Manjampatti Valley catchment basin drains into the end of the Chinnar River. This Valley is drained by the stream Ten Ar and a smaller unnamed stream 2 km to its west. The unnamed stream is the N-S political boundary between Tamil Nadu and Kerala. The top of the ridge above this stream to the west is the western limit of the catchment. This unnamed stream joins the Pambar River at the point they both join the Chinnar River at the north west corner of the Valley.

Notes

  1. SATHEESH, S (1992) - A preliminary status survey of the mugger crocodile (Crocodylus palustris, Lesson) in Tamil Nadu. Report submitted to the Centre for Herpetology/Madras Crocodile Bank. Table 2 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 20 December 2004. Retrieved 7 February 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. S. V. Sajith Kumar, School of Social Sciences, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala, Ca_vat[i- A Case Study of Muthuvar Youth Dormitory System, Anthropologist, 7(1): 61-68 (2005)
  3. Blue Yonder Holidays Pvt Ltd, Chinnar, the real treasure trove, retrieved 8/30/2007 Koottar Tree House Archived 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
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