I guess Ganga water is really holy........
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  I guess Ganga water is really holy........
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Author Topic: I guess Ganga water is really holy........  (Read 881 times)
Sbane
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« on: May 16, 2009, 07:01:30 PM »

Mystery Factor Gives Ganges a Clean Reputation

by Julian Crandall Hollick

 Hindus have always believed that water from India's Ganges River has extraordinary powers. The Indian emperor Akbar called it the "water of immortality" and always traveled with a supply. The British East India Co. used only Ganges water on its ships during the three-month journey back to England, because it stayed "sweet and fresh."

Indians have always claimed it prevents diseases, but are the claims wives' tales or do they have scientific substance?

In the fourth installment of a six-part series, independent producer Julian Crandall Hollick searched for the "mysterious X factor" that gives Ganges water its mythical reputation.

He starts his investigation looking for the water's special properties at the river's source in the Himalayas. There, wild plants, radioactive rocks, and unusually cold, fast-running water combine to form the river. But since 1854, almost all of the Ganges' water has been siphoned off for irrigation as it leaves the Himalayas.

Hollick speaks with DS Bhargava, a retired professor of hydrology, who has spent a lifetime performing experiments up and down Ganges in the plains of India. In most rivers, Bhargava says, organic material usually exhausts a river's available oxygen and starts putrefying. But in the Ganges, an unknown substance, or "X factor" that Indians refer to as a "disinfectant," acts on organic materials and bacteria and kills them. Bhargava says that the Ganges' self-purifying quality leads to oxygen levels 25 times higher than any other river in the world.

Hollick's search for a scientific explanation for the X factor leads him to a spiritual leader at an ashram and a biologist in Kanpur. But his best answer for the Ganges' mysterious substance comes from Jay Ramachandran, a molecular biologist and entrepreneur in Bangalore.

In a short science lesson, Ramachandran explains why the Ganges doesn't spread disease among the millions of Indians who bathe in it. But he can't explain why the river alone has this extraordinary ability to retain oxygen.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=17134270



According to a graphic in the article the "x-factor" may be bacteriaphages(viruses). Of course that brings up the question why there would be more bacteriaphages in this particular river. Still I wouldn't get in the Ganga anywhere downstream of Kanpur and its tanneries.
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minionofmidas
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« Reply #1 on: May 17, 2009, 04:48:34 AM »

Why would Ganga water be the same everywhere? It has lots of tributaries.

Eh. I've never been to the Ganga, but I have been on the Yamuna's banks. Didn't seem all that different from Germany's rivers. I've swam in the Main here in Frankfurt which nobody does and is actually illegal at most places in the city (stupid freedom-hating prosecution-fearers who would prefer continuing not to have to deal with the issue are behind that. The river was pretty toxic in the 70s - but in the 60s, the river certainly was much dirtier than it is now, and people did swim in it. It looks dirty, of course, but it always has done. That's just good Franconian earth.) And I've waded the Tungabhadra which struck me as very clean for a river that size.
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Sbane
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« Reply #2 on: May 18, 2009, 01:27:46 AM »

Yeah I wonder where the samples were taken from. And you are right that there are many tributaries of the Ganga, and in many places they carry a larger volume of water than the Ganga itself. I think this is true with the Ghagra and even the Yamuna brings in a lot of water at Allahabad( although most of this comes from the Chambal). The Yamuna at Delhi is horribly polluted and pretty undesirable to get in, not to mention it is the bathtub of Delhi's poor. The hooghly in Calcutta is different. It doesn't look that polluted( although its brown because of silt) and is very inviting. Still I know I shouldn't for the sake of my skin. And even if there is a higher concentration of bacteriaphages in the Ganga, it doesn't do anything against all the wonderful chemicals released into the water from beautiful cities like Kanpur. But still people claim the Ganga has "magical" properties and I found this article to be interesting.
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