Hubbry Logo
search
logo
871547

Topography of Pakistan

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Topography of Pakistan

The topography of Pakistan is divided into seven geographic areas: the northern highlands, the Indus River plain, the desert areas, the Pothohar Plateau, Balochistan Plateau, Salt Range, and the Sistan Basin. All the rivers of Pakistan, i.e. Sindh, Ravi River, Chenab River, Jhelum River, and Sutlej River, originate from the Himalayas mountain range. Some geographers designate Plateau as to the west of the imaginary southwest line; and the Indus Plain lies to the east of that line.

Elevation extremes

[edit]
K2 Peak

Lowest point: Sea level
Highest point: K2 (Mt. Godwin-Austen) 8,611 m [1]

Mountains

[edit]

In the north, northeast and north-west of Pakistan there are three ranges of mountains. Between these ranges of the Himalayas is an area the people of Central and South Asia consider to be the roof of the world. The Himalayas stretch continuously for about 2500 km from east to west. They are bounded to the north-west by the Hindu Kush mountain range and to the north by the Karakoram. Thus there are three mountain ranges in northern Pakistan: Karakoram, Himalayas and Hindu Kush. The contrast between these ranges is geologically interesting.

The Indus Plain

[edit]

Land between two rivers is called DOAB in the local language.[i.e. which?] The name Indus comes from the Sanskrit word "sindhu", meaning "ocean", from which also come the words Sindh, Hindu, and India. The Indus River, one of the great rivers of the world, rises in southwestern Tibet, only about 160 kilometers west of the source of the Sutlej River, which joins the Indus in Punjab, and the Brahmaputra, which runs eastward before turning southwest and flowing through Bangladesh. The catchment area of the Indus is estimated at almost 1 million square kilometers, and all of Pakistan's major rivers (the Kabul River, Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, and Sutlej) flow into it. The Indus River basin is a large, fertile alluvial plain formed by silt from the Indus. This area has been inhabited by agricultural civilizations for at least 5,000 years.

The upper Indus Basin includes Punjab; the lower Indus Basin begins at the Panjnad River (the confluence of the eastern tributaries of the Indus) and extends south to the coast. Punjab means the "land of five waters": the Indus, Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, and Sutlej rivers.[2] The Sutlej river, however, is mostly on the Indian side of the border.

In the southern part of the province of Punjab, the British attempted to harness the irrigation power of the water over 100 years ago when they established what came to be known as the Canal Colonies. The irrigation project, which facilitated the emergence of intensive cultivation despite semi-arid conditions, resulted in important social and political transformations.

Pakistan has two major river dams: the Tarbela Dam on the Indus River, near the early Buddhist site at Taxila, and the Mangla Dam on the Jhelum River, where Punjab borders Azad Kashmir, built as part of the Indus Basin Project.[2] The Warsak Dam on the Kabul River near Peshawar is smaller. These dams, along with a series of headworks and barrages built by the British and expanded since the independence of Pakistan in 1947, are of vital importance to the national economy and played an important role in calming the raging floodwaters of 1992, which devastated large areas in the northern highlands and the Punjab plains.

The Desert areas

[edit]

Cholistan Desert

[edit]
Thar Desert satellite imagery

The Cholistan desert spans an area of 16,000 square kilometers. The name "Cholistan" is derived from the Turkish word "chol," meaning "desert," though the desert is locally known as Rohi. The desert hosts an annual jeep rally, which draws many tourists.

Indus Valley Desert

[edit]

The Indus Valley Desert is located in the northern area of Pakistan. The desert spans an area of 19500 square kilometers and is surrounded by northwestern scrub forests. The Indus Valley Desert lies between two major rivers in the region, the Chenab and the Indus.

Kharan Desert

[edit]

The Kharan Desert is located in Northeast Balochistan (a Pakistani state). The desert was used for nuclear testing by the Pakistan military, making it the most famous of the five deserts. The desert is in the center of a large empty basin.

Thal Desert

[edit]

The Thal Desert is located in northeastern Pakistan between the Indus and Jhelum rivers. A large canal-building project is currently underway to irrigate the land. Irrigation will make most of the desert suitable for farming.

Thar Desert

[edit]

The Thar Desert spans 264,091 km2 (101,966 sq mi)[3] and covers large areas of both Pakistan and India. It is the seventeenth largest desert on the planet and the third largest in Asia.

Potohar Plateau

[edit]

Tilla Jogian, second highest peak in Potwar The Potwar Plateau (also Potowar or Potohar) is a plateau in the province of Punjab, Pakistan and the western parts of Pakistan administered Kashmir. The area was the home of the Soanian Culture, which is evidenced by the discovery of fossils, tools, coins, and remains of ancient archaeological sites. The local people speak the Potwari language. Pothohar Plateau is bounded on the east by the Jhelum River, on the west by the Indus River, on the north by the Kala Chitta Range and the Margalla Hills, and on the south by the Salt Range.

Balochistan Plateau

[edit]

The Balochistan plateau is located in the south-west of Pakistan with altitudes mainly ranging from 600 to 3010 metres. This is an extensive area of 347,190 km2 with a number of distinct natural topographical and drainage features that can be identified as follows: ▪ Basins of Northern Balochistan ▪ Basins of Western Balochistan ▪ Mountain ranges ▪ Coastal areas

Salt Range in District Minawali Punjab Pakistan

Salt Range

[edit]

The Salt Range is a hill system in the Punjab province of Pakistan, deriving its name from its extensive deposits of rock salt. The range extends from the Jhelum River to the Indus, across the northern portion of the Punjab province. The Salt Range contains the great mines of Mayo, Khewra Salt Mine, Warcha and Kalabagh, which yield vast supplies of salt. Coal of a medium quality is also found. It is believed that the Salt Range was founded by the horses of Alexander the Great's army.The average altitude of Potohar platue is 300m-600m

Sistan Basin

[edit]

Balochistan is located at the eastern edge of the Iranian plateau and in the border region between Southwest, Central, and South Asia. It is geographically the largest of Pakistan's four provinces, at 347,190 km2 or 134,051 square miles, and composes 48% of the total land area of Pakistan. The population density is very low due to the mountainous terrain and scarcity of water. The southern region is known as Makran. The central region is known as Kalat.[1] The Sulaiman Mountains dominate the northeast corner, and the Bolan Pass is a natural route into Afghanistan towards Kandahar. Much of the province south of the Quetta region is sparse desert terrain with pockets of inhabitable land, mostly near rivers and streams. The largest desert is the Kharan Desert which occupies the most of Kharan District.

This area is subject to frequent seismic disturbances because the tectonic plate under the Indian Plate collides with the Eurasian Plate as it continues to move northward and to push the Himalayas ever higher. The region surrounding Quetta is highly prone to earthquakes. A severe quake in 1931 was followed by an even more destructive one in 1935. The small city of Quetta was almost completely destroyed, and the adjacent military cantonment was heavily damaged. At least 20,000 people were killed. Tremors continue in the vicinity of Quetta; the most recent major earthquake occurred in October 2008. In January 1991 a severe earthquake destroyed entire villages in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, but far fewer people were killed in the quake than died in 1935. A major earthquake centred in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa's Kohistan District in 1965 also caused heavy damage.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The topography of Pakistan features extreme topographic diversity, spanning from the highest elevations on Earth in its northern mountain ranges to expansive alluvial plains, arid plateaus, and a narrow coastal plain along the Arabian Sea.[1][2] This variation arises from tectonic forces, including the collision of the Indian and Eurasian plates, which have uplifted massive ranges like the Karakoram, Himalaya, and Hindu Kush, where peaks exceed 8,000 meters, including K2 at 8,611 meters above sea level.[3][1] Southward, the landscape transitions to the Indus River's broad floodplain, covering about 200,000 square kilometers of fertile plains in Punjab and Sindh, flanked by the Thar Desert in the east and the Balochistan Plateau's rugged hills and valleys in the west, with elevations generally between 300 and 1,000 meters.[4][2] These landforms, shaped by fluvial erosion, aridification, and seismic activity, dictate regional climates from alpine glaciation in the north to subtropical aridity in the south, profoundly impacting agriculture, water resources, and seismic hazards.[5][6]

Geological and Tectonic Foundations

Plate Tectonic Interactions and Formation History

The topography of Pakistan derives primarily from the Cenozoic collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates, which commenced approximately 50–55 million years ago during the early Eocene as the northern margin of India impinged upon Asia following the closure of the Neo-Tethys Ocean. This convergence, characterized by northward drift of the Indian plate at rates exceeding 150 mm/year in the Paleocene before slowing to 40–50 mm/year post-collision, induced intense crustal shortening, thickening, and isostatic uplift, forming the Himalayan orogenic belt and associated northern highlands through thrust faulting and metamorphism.[7][8][9] In western Pakistan, the Sulaiman and Kirthar ranges emerged from oblique dextral transpression along the western margin of the Indian plate against the rigid Afghan block (an extension of Eurasia), with deformation intensifying around 30 million years ago in the Oligocene as collision propagated westward, generating fold-thrust belts via basement-involved faulting and thin-skinned tectonics. Concurrently, subduction of the Arabian plate beneath the Eurasian plate at the Makran trench, active since at least the Eocene with convergence rates of 40–50 mm/year, has driven accretionary prism development and back-arc basin formation in Balochistan, contributing to the broader deformational regime through slab rollback and associated volcanism.[10][11][12] These tectonic processes overlay a stratigraphic foundation spanning multiple eras: Paleozoic crystalline basement and shelf carbonates in Balochistan and the western Salt Range, representing Gondwanan passive margin deposits from the Cambrian to Permian; Mesozoic siliciclastic and carbonate sequences in the Indus plains and foreland basins, accumulated during Jurassic-Cretaceous rifting and marine transgression prior to collision; and Cenozoic molasse sediments in flexural foredeeps, subsequently folded and uplifted to create the current relief contrasts between highlands, plateaus, and basins.[13]

Seismic Activity and Geological Hazards

Pakistan's topography is profoundly influenced by its position astride the convergent boundary between the Indian and Eurasian plates, where ongoing collision generates intense seismic activity and associated geological hazards. The Indian plate converges northward with the Eurasian plate at a rate of approximately 4-6 cm per year, compressing the crust and driving frequent earthquakes, particularly in the northern Himalayan-Karakoram region and western fold belts.[14] This tectonic regime manifests in thrust faulting along the Himalayan arc and strike-slip motion along transform faults, altering landscapes through differential uplift and fault scarps.[15] Prominent fault systems include the Main Central Thrust (MCT), a major Himalayan thrust fault that accommodates much of the India-Eurasia convergence through reverse faulting, contributing to seismic events in northern Pakistan. The MCT and related structures, such as the Balakot-Bagh fault involved in the 2005 event, have triggered destructive quakes by releasing accumulated strain from crustal shortening. Complementing this, the Chaman Fault, a left-lateral strike-slip fault extending over 850 km along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, absorbs lateral components of plate motion at rates up to 12 mm/year in creeping segments, yet still hosts significant seismic releases.[16] These faults, part of a broader network of at least 25 active systems, elevate earthquake risk, with northern and western provinces like Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan classified in high seismic zones (3 and 4) per Pakistan's zoning, where peak ground accelerations exceed 0.24g.[17][18] The 8 October 2005 Kashmir earthquake exemplifies these hazards, with a moment magnitude of 7.6 rupturing a thrust fault near the MCT, causing over 86,000 deaths, primarily from ground shaking and induced landslides in the rugged northern terrain. Epicenters cluster along these faults, with historical data showing recurrence intervals of decades to centuries for events above magnitude 6, driven by strain buildup from unrelenting plate convergence. In the Karakoram, tectonic uplift rates of about 2 mm/year counteract erosion, sustaining high topography but amplifying seismic energy release during ruptures.[19][15] Such dynamics underscore the causal link between plate tectonics and Pakistan's elevated topography, where compressive forces not only build mountains but also perpetuate geological instability.[15]

Northern Highlands and Mountains

Karakoram and Himalayan Ranges

The Karakoram Range dominates northern Pakistan, particularly in Gilgit-Baltistan, where tectonic compression from the ongoing India-Asia collision has uplifted peaks exceeding 8,000 meters. K2, at 8,611 meters, stands as the range's highest point and the world's second-tallest mountain, with its pyramid-shaped summit exemplifying the extreme verticality driven by rapid orogenic processes. The range contains over 60 peaks above 7,000 meters, including four of the global fourteen eight-thousanders (K2, Gasherbrum I, Broad Peak, and Gasherbrum II), fostering a topography of jagged ridges and sheer faces with local relief surpassing 5,000 meters in many sectors.[20][21][22] Glaciers in the Karakoram span approximately 22,843 km², the largest non-polar ice concentration, with major systems like the Siachen (75 km long) and Biafo-Hispar (116 km) occupying high-altitude plateaus and descending into steep troughs. These ice masses, sustained by heavy monsoon and westerly precipitation, have sculpted the landscape through repeated advances, forming cirques, arêtes, and U-shaped valleys amid elevations averaging 6,000 meters. Empirical surveys indicate minimal net ice loss in recent decades, contrasting regional Himalayan trends, due to increased winter snowfall and debris cover insulating lower ablation zones.[23][24] In western Pakistan, the Himalayan Range terminates at the Nanga Parbat syntaxis, where the 8,126-meter summit marks a sharp tectonic bend from the Indian plate's indentation into Asia, exposing crystalline core rocks over 2,000 meters of vertical relief from the Indus Valley floor. This syntaxis amplifies erosion, yielding V-shaped gorges and hanging valleys with relief exceeding 7,000 meters, as quantified by digital elevation models showing uplift rates up to 10 mm/year. Pleistocene glaciations further accentuated these features, leaving moraine-dammed lakes and amphitheater-like cirques that define the rugged, youthful morphology.[25][20][26]

Hindu Kush and Associated Ranges

The Hindu Kush range in Pakistan extends northwestward from the Chitral Valley in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, forming a transitional barrier between the country's northern highlands and Afghan territories, with elevations distinctly lower than those of the adjacent Karakoram system. This segment features rugged topography characterized by sharp, snow-capped peaks averaging 4,000 to 6,000 meters, interspersed with deep gorges, glacial troughs, and steep escarpments that impede east-west connectivity.[27][28] The highest elevation in the Pakistani Hindu Kush is Tirich Mir at 7,708 meters, situated in the Chitral district near the Afghan border, marking the range's culminating point with its prominent north face and subsidiary ridges.[29] Other notable summits, such as those in the Hindu Raj subrange, rise to around 6,000 meters, contributing to a landscape of alpine meadows above 3,500 meters that transitions into subalpine forests at lower altitudes.[27] Tectonically, the range represents a southwestern prolongation of the Pamir Knot, where oblique convergence between the Indian and Eurasian plates has uplifted fold-thrust structures since the late Tertiary period, resulting in active faulting and localized inversion that shapes its asymmetric profiles.[30] This deformation has produced a series of northwest-southeast trending ridges, distinct from the more radial compression seen farther east.[31] Key topographic features include low-elevation passes that pierce the otherwise isolating barrier, such as the Khyber Pass at 1,070 meters, which cuts through the range via a narrow defile and has historically channeled human movement despite the surrounding precipitous terrain.[32] These corridors contrast with the range's overall inaccessibility, where elevations exceed 4,500 meters on average for principal summits, reinforcing its role as a natural divide.[27]

Western Fold Mountains and Ranges

Sulaiman and Kirthar Ranges

The Sulaiman and Kirthar Ranges form a series of southwest-verging fold-thrust mountains that delineate the boundary between the eastern Indus Plains and the western Balochistan Plateau, resulting from ongoing compressional deformation linked to the oblique India-Eurasia collision since the Eocene. This tectonic regime has produced a structurally complex belt characterized by thin-skinned thrusting and folding of Paleozoic to Cenozoic sedimentary sequences over a basal décollement within the Cambrian Salt Range Formation.[12][33] The Sulaiman Range extends roughly 400 kilometers northward from the vicinity of Jacobabad to the Gomal Pass area, attaining average elevations of about 2,000 meters with peaks exceeding 3,000 meters, including Takht-e-Sulaiman at 3,487 meters. Its morphology includes prominent asymmetrical anticlines with steep eastern escarpments that drop abruptly toward the plains, reflecting active foreland propagation of deformation and significant shortening estimated at over 100 kilometers across balanced cross-sections.[34] Lying parallel and to the southwest, the Kirthar Range borders Sindh province over a comparable length, with elevations typically ranging from 2,000 to 2,300 meters and a maximum of 2,260 meters at Zardak Peak. It exposes a stratigraphic succession dominated by Jurassic to Cretaceous marine carbonates and shales, such as the Jurassic Shimshuk Formation and Cretaceous Parh Limestone, uplifted along thrust faults that accommodate lateral escape tectonics between the main Himalayan front and the Makran subduction zone.[35][36] As orographic barriers oriented north-south, these ranges intercept southerly moisture-laden winds, fostering rain-shadow aridity in the leeward Balochistan lowlands and contributing to the formation of adjacent desert terrains through reduced precipitation and enhanced evaporation.[37]

Balochistan Fold Belt

The Balochistan Fold Belt represents a structurally intricate segment of Pakistan's western margin, dominated by north-south trending folds and thrusts formed through oblique convergence along the Chaman transform fault system during the Cenozoic India-Eurasia collision. This belt, extending roughly 1,250 km from Waziristan southward, encompasses ophiolite-bearing thrust nappes and mélanges that delineate the relict Neo-Tethys suture, with obduction events dated to the Late Cretaceous to Paleocene (approximately 70-55 Ma).[13][38] Distinct from broader plateau surfaces, it exhibits disharmonic folding and fault-block uplifts, producing a fragmented landscape of narrow anticlinal ridges separated by wide synclinal valleys and deep gorges.[13] Prominent anticlinal structures, such as the Mari and Bugti Hills within the Mari-Bugti zone, manifest as hogbacked mountains elongated over 120 km, with elevations ranging from 600 to 1,500 meters above surrounding basins.[13] These features expose Jurassic to Cretaceous sedimentary sequences thrust over younger strata, contributing to the belt's rugged, barren topography marked by sparse vegetation and erosional scarps. Ophiolite suites, including the Muslim Bagh complex covering about 800 km² with a 17.5 km thick oceanic slab of harzburgite, gabbros, and pillow basalts, form upper and lower nappes obducted onto the Indian margin, influencing local relief through resistant ultramafic outcrops.[38][13] Geological markers include Cretaceous flysch sequences in thrust sheets of the Bela-Zhob and Kakar-Khorasan basins, deposited in deep-marine forearc settings prior to obduction around 66-55 Ma, overlain by Tertiary molasses deposits such as Eocene Ghazij Formation sandstones and conglomerates (up to 1,000 m thick) in synclinal lows.[39][13] These sediments record the transition from subduction-related turbidites to post-collisional coarse clastics, with total stratigraphic thicknesses reaching 6-10 km in depocenters. Fault-block mountains, bounded by reverse and strike-slip faults like the Kingri and Kirthar Thrust, further dissect the terrain into isolated massifs and basins, enhancing seismic vulnerability and aridity through rain-shadow effects.[13] This configuration underscores the belt's role as a dynamic fold-thrust system, accommodating ongoing transpression without the extensive planation seen in eastern plateaus.[39]

Plateaus and Uplands

Balochistan Plateau

The Balochistan Plateau forms the southwestern upland expanse of Pakistan, extending west of the Sulaiman and Kirthar ranges with elevations primarily between 600 and 3,000 meters above sea level, though averages often fall around 600–900 meters in broader tableland areas. Composed mainly of Cretaceous to Tertiary sedimentary sequences, it features thick marine shelf deposits exceeding 5,000 meters in pre-Eocene carbonates, sandstones, and mudstones, overlain by Eocene siliciclastics like the Ghazij Formation (>1,600 meters of mudrocks, sandstones, and coal seams) and limestones such as the Kirthar Formation. Cretaceous units include the Chiltan Limestone (up to 1,800 meters) and Parh Limestone (300–600 meters), reflecting a history of shelf sedimentation disrupted by ophiolite obduction. Western sectors incorporate volcanic elements from associated arcs, contrasting with the predominantly sedimentary eastern plateaus.[40][39] This eroded tableland displays low overall relief punctuated by dissection from seasonal wadi streams, fostering a rugged terrain of narrow valleys and basins amid hyper-arid conditions with minimal vegetative cover. Key geomorphic elements include pediments at range bases and isolated inselbergs rising from the subdued surface, products of differential erosion on resistant Cretaceous-Tertiary rocks. Ephemeral depressions capture inland drainage, forming shallow Hamun lakes like Hamun-e-Mashkel and Hamun-e-Lora, which fill sporadically during rare heavy rains before evaporating or infiltrating permeable substrates, underscoring the endorheic hydrology distinct from exoreic eastern systems. Wind action further sculpts yardangs—streamlined ridges—in exposed sedimentary layers, enhancing the plateau's dissected, barren aspect.[39][40] Tectonically, the plateau exhibits greater stability relative to flanking fold belts, owing to its position in the Indus foreland basin amid the broader India-Eurasia collision framework initiated in the Eocene–Oligocene, with obduction events tracing to Late Cretaceous–Paleocene. Uplift pulses, including Miocene phases tied to compressional deformation and burial depths up to 6,000 meters, have elevated the structure while folding and strike-slip faulting (e.g., along Chaman and Ghazaband systems) impose ongoing but subdued activity compared to northern highlands. This evolution yields a highland less prone to extreme seismicity than adjacent ranges, though foreland sedimentation records persistent flexural loading and erosion from uplifting hinterlands.[40][39]

Potohar Plateau and Salt Range

The Potohar Plateau, also known as Potwar Plateau, constitutes a central dissected upland in northern Pakistan, spanning between the Jhelum and Indus Rivers to the east and west, respectively, and bounded by the Salt Range to the south and the Sub-Himalayas to the north.[41] Elevations across the plateau typically range from 300 to 600 meters, with higher points exceeding 600 meters in the north-central areas, characterized by rolling hills, ravines, and undulating terrain shaped by Pleistocene fluvial and eolian processes.[41] The surface is extensively covered by Pleistocene loess deposits, which vary in thickness, filling valleys and gullies while thinning on elevated exposures, contributing to the plateau's soil fertility and erosion patterns.[42] These loess mantles, derived from wind-blown silt, overlie older sedimentary rocks including Eocene limestones and Miocene-Pleistocene fluvial sands, reflecting paleoclimatic shifts during glacial-interglacial cycles.[41] Adjoining the Potohar Plateau to the south, the Salt Range forms a prominent escarpment with elevations averaging 670 meters and peaking at 1,522 meters at Sakesar Peak, comprising a series of thrust-faulted ridges exposing a nearly complete stratigraphic sequence from Precambrian to Tertiary rocks.[43] The range's defining feature is the Ediacaran-Early Cambrian Salt Range Formation, consisting of evaporitic salts and shales that have undergone diapiric intrusion, creating unique salt plugs and influencing local tectonics as the southernmost expression of Himalayan folding.[44] Fossil-rich strata, particularly Cambrian trilobite-bearing beds, are well-preserved, making the Salt Range a key paleontological site with exposures revealing Infra-Cambrian to Eocene sequences disrupted by salt tectonics.[45] The Khewra Salt Mine, located in the eastern Salt Range, provides exceptional underground exposures of the saline evaporites and associated marls, illustrating halite deposits formed in a restricted basin during the late Neoproterozoic, with mining operations revealing faulted and folded structures that highlight the range's compressional history.[46] Southward extensions include residual hills like the Kirana Hills, composed of Precambrian quartzites and metasediments resistant to erosion, standing as isolated inselbergs amid the Punjab plains.[44] This topographic transition from the plateau's loess-mantled uplands to the Salt Range's rugged, evaporite-dominated ridges underscores a diverse geomorphic zone integral to Pakistan's central groundwater aquifers and seismic risk assessments.[41]

Plains and Lowlands

Indus River Plains

The Indus River Plains form the core of Pakistan's eastern lowlands, comprising fertile alluvial deposits accumulated through fluvial action from the Indus River and its tributaries. These plains result from Holocene sedimentation derived from erosion in the Himalayan and Karakoram ranges, creating a broad depositional landscape that contrasts with the erosional uplands to the north and west.[47] [48] The region exhibits gentle topography with elevations generally between 100 and 300 meters in the upper sections, sloping gradually southeastward toward the Arabian Sea.[2] In the upper Indus Plains of Punjab province, the landscape is characterized by the doab system, consisting of interfluves between the Indus and major tributaries such as the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej, and Beas rivers. These doabs are underlain by fine alluvium deposited over millennia, supporting intensive agriculture due to the nutrient-rich soils and seasonal flooding.[2] The fluvial morphology includes active floodplains with meandering channels that periodically shift, leaving behind bars and levees.[49] Further downstream in Sindh province, the lower Indus Plains narrow, featuring more pronounced levees, abandoned channels, and a distributive fluvial system known as the Indus mega-ridge. This area displays relict features like oxbow lakes formed from cutoff meanders, indicative of historical river avulsions stabilized during the late Holocene.[50] [49] The plains' relative tectonic stability, evidenced by low elevation-relief ratios and minimal remnant uplift, has preserved this depositional environment, enabling sustained sediment accumulation and minimal disruption to hydrological patterns.[51] [52]

Coastal Plains and Arabian Sea Littoral

The coastal plains of Pakistan form a narrow, low-relief sedimentary fringe along the Arabian Sea, extending from the Indus Delta in Sindh province westward through Balochistan to the Iranian border, with widths typically ranging from 10 to 50 kilometers and elevations averaging under 30 meters above sea level. This littoral zone consists primarily of recent alluvial deposits, mudflats, and tidal flats shaped by wave action, tides, and sporadic fluvial input, distinguishing it from the inland Indus plains by pronounced marine influences such as salt marshes and chenier ridges.[53] The Indus Delta represents the eastern terminus of this coastal system, encompassing approximately 8,000 square kilometers of distributary channels, tidal creeks, and expansive mudflats, where pre-dam mangrove forests historically covered about 2,600 square kilometers, supporting unique arid-adapted species like Avicennia marina. Construction of major upstream dams, including Mangla in 1967 and Tarbela in 1976, reduced annual sediment discharge by over 80 percent, from roughly 250 million tons to less than 50 million tons, triggering net shoreline retreat and deltaic erosion at rates of 25-45 meters per year in vulnerable sectors, particularly along the central and eastern delta fronts. This shift reversed earlier progradational trends, where pre-1950s advancement averaged 45 meters per year, leading to subsidence-enhanced vulnerability to tidal inundation and saltwater intrusion up to 80 kilometers inland.[54][53][54] Westward, the Makran coast transitions to rugged, tectonically active terrain with prominent uplifted marine terraces—stepped platforms of Pleistocene to Holocene age—elevated 10 to 200 meters above present sea level due to oblique subduction along the Makran convergent margin, where the Arabian plate underthrusts the Eurasian plate at rates of 40-50 millimeters per year. Long-term uplift averages 0.3-0.5 millimeters per year across multiple terrace flights, as evidenced by dated coral and shell assemblages, fostering spits, pocket beaches, and localized subsidence in inter-terrace depressions amid minimal fluvial sediment supply. These features underscore the coast's exposure to infrequent but high-magnitude seismic and tsunamigenic events, contrasting the subsidence-dominated Indus sector.[55][56]

Desert and Arid Regions

Eastern Deserts (Thar and Cholistan)

The Eastern Deserts of Pakistan, encompassing the Thar and Cholistan regions, form subtropical arid expanses along the border with India, characterized by extensive sand dunes and low precipitation influenced by regional rain-shadow dynamics from the Aravalli Range.[57] These deserts result from aeolian processes depositing sediments in a structural depression, with the Thar covering approximately 200,000 km² across India and Pakistan, of which about 25% lies in Pakistan.[57] The landscape features shifting and stabilized dunes shaped by prevailing winds, primarily barchan and longitudinal forms, with dune heights reaching up to 50 meters in active areas.[58] The Thar Desert in Pakistan, extending into Sindh province as the Tharparkar region, consists predominantly of Pleistocene aeolian sands mobilized by monsoon winds, forming complex dune fields including megabarchanoids and remnant longitudinal dunes.[57] Stabilized portions support sparse thorny scrub vegetation, such as acacia species (e.g., Prosopis cineraria and Acacia nilotica), adapted to hyper-arid conditions with deep root systems accessing groundwater at depths of 50-100 meters.[59] Barchan dunes, crescent-shaped and migratory, dominate mobile sectors, while interdune flats occasionally experience brief seasonal runoff from rare torrents.[60] Cholistan, an extension of the Thar into Punjab province covering about 25,800 km², transitions to gravelly reg plains interspersed with sand ridges and alluvial fans, lacking perennial streams but featuring episodic seasonal torrents known as tois during monsoon flashes.[61] The terrain includes smaller Cholistan with low sand dunes and broader plains, where groundwater aquifers lie 40-100 meters below the surface, often brackish and supporting limited pastoralism amid thorny shrublands.[62] These features underscore the deserts' role as rain-shadow arid zones, with annual rainfall typically under 200 mm, fostering dune stabilization through sparse xerophytic cover rather than dense forests.[63]

Western and Inland Deserts (Kharan, Thal)

The Kharan Desert, situated in southwestern Balochistan province, occupies an interior basin with predominantly hamada landscapes featuring exposed pebble pavements and minimal dune accumulation, distinguishing it from the dune-dominated eastern deserts. Elevations in the region typically range from 500 to 800 meters, lying in the rain shadow of the Chagai Hills, which exacerbates its hyper-arid conditions with annual precipitation often below 100 mm, primarily from erratic winter rains. The terrain includes intermittent flash flood channels known as khadis and occasional salt flats, supporting sparse xerophytic vegetation such as acacia and tamarisk adapted to extreme aridity and high diurnal temperature swings. This area gained historical significance as the site of Pakistan's Chagai-II nuclear tests on May 30, 1998, conducted in underground shafts within the adjacent Ras Koh Hills of the Kharan region.[64][65] The Thal Desert, an inland arid zone in Punjab province, spans the interfluve between the Indus River and its eastern tributaries, including the Jhelum and Chenab, forming part of the Sindh Sagar Doab with a landscape of wind-reworked loess-sand mixtures and aligned longitudinal dunes oriented by prevailing winds. Covering approximately 20,000 square kilometers, it exhibits elevations from about 100 to 300 meters above sea level, with sand ridges prone to shifting due to high wind velocities exceeding 20 km/h seasonally. Annual rainfall averages 185 to 300 mm, concentrated in summer monsoons, yet insufficient to prevent desertification, resulting in low vegetation cover dominated by drought-resistant grasses and shrubs. Ephemeral watercourses channel rare flash floods across the surface, while subsurface salinity contributes to scattered playas, limiting agricultural potential without irrigation.[66][67] Both deserts exemplify closed interior basins with deflationary surfaces shaped by aeolian processes, where sparse fluvial inputs via khadis contrast with the perennial river influences in surrounding plains, fostering ecosystems resilient to prolonged droughts and sand encroachment.[68]

Basins and Depressions

Sistan Basin

The Sistan Basin, an endorheic depression spanning parts of southwestern Afghanistan, southeastern Iran, and a minor portion of southwestern Pakistan in Balochistan province, functions as a topographic sink capturing drainage from the western Hindu Kush and adjacent ranges via the Helmand River and tributaries. Pakistan's share constitutes approximately 2-3% of the basin's total area, primarily along the tripoint border region where low-relief plains extend eastward from the main Iranian-Afghan wetlands. The basin floor averages 450-520 meters above sea level, forming a broad, enclosed lowland prone to arid conditions and episodic inundation.[69][70] Key geomorphic features include expansive alluvial fans radiating from mountain fronts, deflationary plains sculpted by persistent winds, and seasonal marshlands associated with the fluctuating Hamun-e Helmand (or Hamun Lakes), which expand during wet periods from snowmelt and contract amid drought, exposing saline flats. These dynamics reflect the basin's isolation from exoreic systems, with internal evaporation exceeding inflow, leading to hypersaline residues and playa deposits. In Pakistan's sector, the terrain transitions into gravelly pediments and sand sheets, influenced by sparse runoff from local wadis.[71][72] Tectonically, the basin originated from subsidence linked to the Cenozoic closure of a Neo-Tethyan oceanic arm along the Sistan suture zone, with subduction and collisional processes active since at least 90 million years ago, followed by Neogene right-lateral faulting and post-Miocene deformation that deepened the depression through flexural loading and sedimentary infill. This structural evolution has accommodated thick sequences of Miocene to Quaternary molasse deposits, fostering the basin's persistent low gradient.[73][74] Proximate to Pakistan's boundary, the basin interfaces with the Registan Desert's southern fringes, an erg of barchan dunes and sand seas spilling from Afghanistan, exacerbating aeolian transport. Intense dust storms, driven by seasonal pressure gradients and the 120-day "Levar" winds peaking in summer, originate here and propagate eastward, reducing visibility to near zero across Balochistan and impacting aviation and agriculture in adjacent areas.[75][76]

Other Structural Basins

The Quetta Basin, an intermontane structural depression in northern Balochistan, lies at an average elevation of 1,680 meters above sea level and consists of alluvial fills accumulated from erosion of flanking mountain ranges.[77] This basin, part of the broader Pishin Lora system, integrates local drainage through its tectonic low, bounded by the Sulaiman and Toba Kakar ranges.[78] Additional minor basins, such as those centered on Zhob and Loralai in northeastern Balochistan, form irregular depressions amid the plateau's folded terrain, acting as sinks for ephemeral surface flows.[79] These structural features, along with the Quetta Basin, commonly develop as pull-apart structures amid en echelon arrangements of strike-slip faults linked to the regional Chaman fault system.[80]

Elevation Extremes and Hydrological Integration

Highest and Lowest Elevations

Pakistan's highest elevation is K2, located in the Karakoram Range in the Gilgit-Baltistan region, with a summit height of 8,611 meters above sea level as determined by the Survey of India and confirmed in subsequent measurements.[81] This peak, also known as Mount Godwin-Austen, represents the second-highest point on Earth and dominates the northern topography, where local relief exceeds 8,000 meters from the summit to adjacent valleys draining toward the Indus River plains below 200 meters elevation.[81] The lowest elevation in Pakistan occurs at sea level along the Arabian Sea coast, spanning the coastal plains of Sindh and Balochistan provinces at 0 meters.[82] No inland points fall below sea level; the nearest depressions, such as those in the Sistan Basin shared with Afghanistan and Iran, maintain elevations above 400 meters above mean sea level, with playas around 463 meters.[83] This topographic range of approximately 8,611 meters from highest to lowest point creates pronounced elevation gradients across Pakistan, influencing atmospheric pressure differences and orographic effects that concentrate precipitation in the northern highlands while aridifying southern lowlands.[82] Such extremes underscore the country's diverse relief, from towering glaciated peaks to flat littoral zones, with vertical drops in the Karakoram exemplifying one of the steepest in the world over short horizontal distances.[81]

Topographic Influence on Drainage and Rivers

Pakistan's topography drives distinct drainage patterns, with the Indus River system exemplifying transverse incision through the Himalayan and Karakoram ranges, where steep elevation gradients force the river to carve deep gorges, including the Indus Gorge reaching depths of 5,200 meters near Nanga Parbat.[84] This antecedent drainage persists despite tectonic uplift, enabling the river to maintain its path across multiple transverse mountain barriers before transitioning to an axial flow along the low-gradient Indus Plains.[85] The overall Indus catchment spans approximately 1,120,000 km², capturing precipitation from diverse topographic zones including high-altitude glaciers and monsoon-influenced lowlands.[86] In contrast to the exorheic eastern systems that outlet to the Arabian Sea via the Indus and its tributaries, western topographic depressions foster endorheic basins, where drainage terminates in inland sinks due to aridity and closed structural lows, as seen in extensions of the Sistan system.[87] Elevation contrasts at range fronts promote sediment deposition, forming alluvial fans where confined mountain streams emerge onto piedmonts, redistributing coarse materials radially before integrating into trunk river networks.[88] Topographic relief amplifies hydrological variability, particularly through monsoon-driven inputs that dominate eastern river discharges, yielding high suspended sediment loads—up to 355 tons per km² annually in upper reaches—and fostering episodic high-flow events modulated by basin gradients.[89] [90] These patterns underscore causal links between relief, precipitation distribution, and fluvial dynamics, with steeper western slopes channeling flash floods into isolated basins versus the sustained, sediment-laden flows of the Indus corridor.

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.