Anthropocene Physiography and Morphology of Chilika; India

Siba Prasad Mishra *

Department of Civil Engineering, Centurion University of Technology and Management, BBSR, Odisha, India.

Rabindra Nath Nanda

Department of Civil Engineering, Centurion University of Technology and Management, Jatni, BBSR, Odisha, India.

Saswat Mishra

Dept of Civil Engineering, Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology, KIIT Road, Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India.

K. C. Sethi

Department of Civil Engineering, Centurion University of Technology and Management, Jatni, BBSR, Odisha, India.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Introduction: Based on stratigraphy, events, ecology and climatology, the present time is assigned Anthropocene epoch due to dominance Homosapiens over geo- bio-hydro-aero spheres of the mother earth during its accepted Anthropocene epoch succeeding the official 11700 years old Holocene epoch from 1950. Asia’s largest shallow brackish water lagoon, the Chilika housed over about 1000km2, behind 64.3km barrier spit with multiple tidal inlets to Bay of Bengal. It is sinking and shrinking due to rapid dimensional diminution, environmental degradation, sedimentation, salinity depletion, phytoplankton invasion. Present study envisages the elementary morphology, formation mechanism, sediment transport, and dynamic performance of tidal inlets and the lagoon by applying GIS methodology between the year 1930 and 2017 including its local catchment land use changes within the lagoon and associated south Mahanadi delta. Under vulnerability, the brackish water lagoon is constantly deteriorating its ecosystem, it is required for wise use of the wetland that can alleviate the poverty, uplift lagoon users economy, and disallowing the stakeholders living standard during present Anthropocene epoch

Keywords: Anthropocene, Chilika lagoon, Mahanadi delta, morphology


How to Cite

Mishra, Siba Prasad, Rabindra Nath Nanda, Saswat Mishra, and K. C. Sethi. 2021. “Anthropocene Physiography and Morphology of Chilika; India”. Annual Research & Review in Biology 36 (2):71-95. https://doi.org/10.9734/arrb/2021/v36i230344.

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