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In the semi-arid and arid regions of Rajasthan,
particularly in Bikaner, Phalodi and Barmer, almost all the houses
traditionally had underground tanks or tankas for storing drinking water. The
tanks could be as large as a big room. The tankas were part of the
well-developed rooftop rainwater harvesting system and were built inside the
main house or the courtyard. They were connected to the sloping roofs of the
houses through a pipe. Rain falling on the rooftops would travel down the pipe
and was stored in these underground ‘tankas’. The first spell of rain was
usually not collected, as this would clean the roofs and the pipes. The
rainwater from the subsequent showers was then collected.
The rainwater can be stored in the tankas till the
next rainfall making it an extremely reliable source of drinking water when all
other sources are dried up, particularly in the summers. Rainwater, or palar
pani, as commonly referred to in these parts, is considered the purest form of
natural water. Many houses constructed underground rooms adjoining the ‘tanka’
to beat the summer heat as it would keep the room cool.
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