Geo19 4 IndianGeography Short PDF
Geo19 4 IndianGeography Short PDF
Geo19 4 IndianGeography Short PDF
com
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7.3 New Moore Island ................................................................................................................................................................... 53
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Locational Extent of India
East-West Extent (~30°) 68° 7' East to 97° 25' East longitude
South-North Extent of mainland India (Including POK) (~29°) 8° 4' North to 37° 6' North latitude
South-North Extent of India (Including POK and the Andaman 6° 45' North to 37° 6' North latitude
and Nicobar Islands) (~31°)
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Location: Indira Col and NJ9842
• The southernmost point of the country is the Pygmalion Point, or Indira Point is located at 6° 45' N lati-
tude.
• North-south extent from Indira Col in Kashmir to Kanyakumari is 3,214 km.
• East-west width from the Rann of Kutch to Arunachal Pradesh is 2,933 km.
• With an area of 32,87,263 km2, India is the seventh largest country in the world.
• India accounts for about 2.4 per cent of the total surface area of the world.
• The temperate part (north of Tropic of Cancer) is twice the area of the tropical part.
• But India has always been treated as a tropical country for two different reason.
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• The country is separated from the rest of Asia by the Himalayas (blocks the cold temperate air masses).
• The tropical monsoons dominate its climate.
1) Bangladesh 4,096.7
2) China 3,488
3) Pakistan 3,323
4) Nepal 1,751
5) Myanmar 1,643
6) Bhutan 699
7) Afghanistan 106
15,106.7
• This is the second longest border of India, next only to its border with Bangladesh.
• Five Indian states, namely Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Arunachal Pra-
desh touch the Indian boundary with China.
• The Sino-Indian border is generally divided into three sectors namely: (i) the Western sector, (ii) the Middle
sector, and (iii) the Eastern sector.
• Separates Jammu and Kashmir state of India from the Xinjiang province of China.
• The western sector boundary is largely the outcome of the British policy towards the state of Jammu and
Kashmir.
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• China claims the Aksai Chin, the Changmo valley, Pangong Tso and the Sponggar Tso area of north-
east Ladakh.
• China also claims a part of Huza-Gilgit area in North Kashmir (ceded to it in 1963 by Pakistan).
• Mc Mahon Line (Shimla accord in 1913-14): The 1,140 km boundary between India and China from the
Bhutan to a point near Diphu pass (Talu-Pass) at the tri-junction of India, Tibet and Myanmar.
• The Indo-Pakistan boundary is the result of the partition of the country under the Radcliffe award.
• Jammu and Kashmir, Sir Creek are the major disputed regions.
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Creeks in the Kutch Region
• The India-Bangladesh Border boundary has been determined under the Radcliffe Award.
• India and Sri Lanka are separated by Palk Strait.
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Physical Map of India
Peninsular Plateau
Himalayas
• Includes the Himalayas, Purvanchal and their extensions Arakan Yoma (Myanmar) and Andaman and
Nicobar Islands (but we consider these as islands only).
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• It is the youngest and highly unstable landmass of India.
Indo-Gangetic Plain
Coastal Plains
Indian Islands
• Two major groups – Lakshadweep (coral islands) and, Andaman and Nicobar Islands (tectonic islands).
• Lakshadweep (part of Reunion Hotspot Volcanic chain) are a group of atolls occupied by coral reefs.
• Andaman and Nicobar Islands is a continuation of Arakan Yoma.
• The islands have volcanoes (Barren Island is the only active volcano) and are tectonically active.
Plains 43
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Rock System Based on Geological History of India
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Geologic Time Scale:
https://www.pmfias.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Precambrian-Supereon-Geological-Time-Scale.jpg
https://www.pmfias.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Phanerozoic-Eon-Geological-Time-Scale.jpg
• Oldest rocks (formed in the pre-Cambrian era – about 4 billion years ago).
• They are known as the ‘Basement Complex’.
• They are azoic or unfossiliferous plutonic intrusions (magma solidified below the surface).
• Includes two divisions: the Cuddapah System and the Vindhyan System.
Cuddapah System
Vindhyan System
• The system comprises of ancient sedimentary rocks (4000 m thick) superimposed on the Archaean base.
• They are mostly unfossiliferous.
• A large area of this belt is covered by the Deccan Traps.
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• The Vindhyan system have diamond bearing regions from which Panna and Golconda diamonds have
been mined.
• It is devoid of metalliferous minerals.
• The Carboniferous rocks (350 million years) comprise mainly of limestone, shale and quartzite.
• Mount Everest is composed of Upper Carboniferous limestones.
• Coal formation started in the Carboniferous age.
• Carboniferous in geology means coal bearing. (most of the coal found in India is not of the
Carboniferous period; High-quality coal of Great Lakes Region-USA, U.K and Ruhr region is Carbonif-
erous coal).
Gondwana System
• The Gondwana System (derives its name Gonds, tribes from Telangana and Andhra Pradesh)
• They are sediments laid down in synclinal troughs on ancient plateau surface.
Gondwana Coal
Jurassic System
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Deccan Trap
• Basaltic lava flowed out of fissures covering a vast area of about ten lakh km2.
• Flat top and steep sides and therefore called ‘trap’ meaning a ‘stair’ or ‘step’ in Swedish.
• At present Deccan Traps covers about 5 lakh km2.
• Kutch, Saurashtra, Maharashtra, the Malwa plateau and northern Karnataka.
• The thickness of the Deccan Traps is maximum in the west.
• The weathering of these rocks has given birth to black cotton soil known as regur.
The Middle Trap Central India and Malwa Very rare to absent Present
• These successive layers of sediments separated by the basalt are called inter-trappean beds.
3. Himalayan Ranges
Duns (Duras)
• Duns are formed when the walls of the temporary lakes collapsed, and water drained away.
• Dehra Dun in Uttarakhand is the best example (75 km long and 15-20 km wide)
• Kotah, Patli Kothri, Chumbi, Kyarda, Chaukhamba, Udhampur and Kotli are other important duns.
• In between the Shiwaliks in the south and the Greater Himalayas in the north.
• The Lower Himalayan ranges are 60-80 km wide and about 2400 km in length.
• Elevations vary from 3,500 to 4,500 m above sea level.
• Many peaks are more than 5,050 m above sea level and are snow-covered throughout the year.
• In Uttarakhand, the Middle Himalayas are marked by the Mussoorie and the Nag Tibba ranges.
• The Mahabharat Lekh, in southern Nepal, is a continuation of the Mussoorie Range.
• East of the Kosi River, the Sapta Kosi, Sikkim, Bhutan, Miri, Abor and Mishmi hills represent the lower
Himalayas.
Majority of the Himalayan hill resorts like Shimla, Mussoorie, Ranikhet, Nainital, Almora and Darjeeling,
etc. are located here.
The Pir Panjal Range Jammu and Kashmir (The range is south of
Kashmir Valley)
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The Dhaola Dhar Range Himachal Pradesh
• The Pir Panjal range in Kashmir extends from the Jhelum river to the upper Beas.
• It rises to 5,000 metres and contains mostly volcanic rocks.
• Pir Panjal Pass (3,480 m), the Bidil (4,270 m), Golabghar Pass (3,812 m) and Banihal Pass (2,835 m).
• The Banihal Pass was used by the Jammu-Srinagar highway and Jammu-Baramulla railway.
• The Kishanganga, the Jhelum and the Chenab cut through the range.
• Southeast of the Ravi, the Pir Panjal continues as Dhaola Dhar range.
Important Valleys
• Between the Pir Panjal and the Zaskar Range of the main Himalayas, lies the valley of Kashmir.
• In Himachal Pradesh, there is Kangra Valley. It is a strike valley.
• On the other hand, the Kulu Valley in the upper course of the Ravi is a transverse valley.
• A valley perpendicular to the slope or parallel to the ridge (also called as a longitudinal valley)
• In contrast, transverse streams cut valleys parallel to the slope (along the dip).
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Strike valley vs. Transverse valley
• The Himalayas extend in the east-west direction from the Indus gorge in the west to the Brahmaputra
gorge in the east.
• Himalayan ranges take sharp southward bends at these gorges. These bends are called syntaxial bends of
the Himalayas.
• The western syntaxial bend occurs near the Naga Parbat (western tip of The Zaskar Range) where the
Indus river has cut a deep gorge.
• The eastern syntaxial bend occurs near the Namche Barwa.
Nanga Parbat means Naked Mountain. It is called so due to its isolation from the Karakoram range that
has many similar high peaks (eight-thousanders)
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Uttarakhand • Thaga La
• Niti Pass
• Lipu Lekh
Sikkim • Nathu La
• Jelep La (important trade route connecting Kalimpong (near Darjeeling)
with Lhasa in Tibet, passes through Jelep La (4,386 m))
• The Trans Himalayas are the Himalayan ranges immediately north of the Great Himalayan range.
• Occur only in the western part of the Himalayas.
• The Zanskar, the Ladakh, the Kailas and the Karakoram are the main ranges.
• The Nanga Parbat (8126 m) is in The Zaskar Range.
• The Kailas Range (Gangdise in Chinese) in western Tibet is an offshoot of the Ladakh Range.
• The highest peak is Mount Kailas (6714 m).
• River Indus originates from the northern slopes of the Kailas range.
• The northernmost range of the Trans-Himalayan Ranges in India is the Karakoram Range (Krishnagiri
range).
• It is a range with lofty peaks (elevation 5,500 m and above).
• It is the abode of some of the greatest glaciers of the world outside the polar regions.
• Some of the peaks are more than 8,000 meters above sea level. K2 (8,611 m) (Godwin Austen or Qogir in
Karakoram Range) is the second highest peak in the world and the highest peak in the Indian Union.
• At the Dihang gorge, the Himalayas take a sudden southward bend and form a series of comparatively low
hills which are collectively called as the Purvanchal.
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Purvanchal Hills
• Mizo Hills were previously known as the Lushai hills. The highest point is the Blue Mountain (2,157 m).
Punjab Himalayas
• The Himalayan region between the Indus and the Satluj rivers (560 km long).
• Karakoram, Ladakh, Pir Panjal, Zaskar and Dhaola Dhar are the major ranges in this section.
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Q. Match List-I with List-II and select the correct answer:
D. Sutlej-Ganga plain gets some rain in winter 4. Distance from the sea
5. Latitude
Codes:
a) A – 1; B – 2; C – 4; D – 5
b) A – 4; B – 5; C – 1; D – 3
c) A – 5; B – 2; C – 4; D – 3
d) A – 5; B – 1; C – 3; D – 4
• Madras is warmer than Calcutta because Madras is closer to the equator.
• Snowfall in the Himalayas is due to altitude.
• Rainfall decreases from east to west due to increasing distance from the sea.
• Sutlej-Ganga plain gets some rain in winter due to Western Disturbances (remnants of the temperate cy-
clone)
Answer: c) A – 5; B – 2; C – 4; D – 3
Western Himalayas
• Between the Indus in the west and the Kali river in the east (880 km).
• In Himachal Himalayas, The Greater Himalaya is represented by the Zaskar range, lesser Himalaya by Pir
Panjal and Dhauladhar ranges and the Outer Himalaya by the Shiwalik range.
• The Kumaon Himalayas lie in Uttarakhand and extend from the Satluj to the Kali river.
• The Lesser Himalayas in Kumaon Himalaya is represented by the Mussoorie and Nag Tiba ranges.
• The flat valleys between the Lesser Himalaya and the Shiwalik range are called ‘doons’ or ‘Duns’.
Central Himalayas
• 800 km between river Kali in the west and river Tista in the east.
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• Some of the world famous peaks Mt. Everest, Kanchenjunga, Makalu, Annapurna, Gosainthan and
Dhaulagiri, are located here.
• The Lesser Himalaya is known as Mahabharat Lekh in this region.
• In between the Great and the Lesser Himalayas, there are Kathmandu and Pokhra lacustrine valleys.
Eastern Himalayas
• Lies between the Tista river in the west and the Brahmaputra river in the east.
• Elevation here is much lesser than that of the Nepal Himalayas.
• The Lesser Himalayas are very narrow and are very close to the Greater Himalayas.
• The Himalayas take a sudden southward turn after the Dihang gorge.
• Purvanchal hills are known by various local names such as Patkai Bum, Naga Hills, Kohima hills, Ma-
nipur hills, Mizo hills (previously known as the Lushai hills), Tripura hills and Barail range.
Karewas
• Karewas are lacustrine deposits (deposits in the lake) in the Valley of Kashmir and Bhadarwah Valley of the
Jammu Division.
• The karewas are mainly devoted to the cultivation of saffron, almond, walnut, apple and orchards.
• In Eastern Himalayas and Kumaon Himalayas, the snowline is around 3,500 m above sea level where-
as in the western Himalayas snowline is about 2,500 m above sea level.
• This difference in snowline is partly due to the increase in latitude from 28° N in Kanchenjunga to 36° N in
the Karakoram. But the major factor is precipitation.
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• Precipitation in the western Himalayas is comparatively low and occurs mostly as snowfall whereas in the
eastern Himalayas the precipitation is greater and occurs mostly in the form of rain.
• In the Greater Himalayan ranges, the snow line is at a lower elevation on the southern slopes than on
the northern slopes because the southern slopes receive more precipitation.
• Some of the largest glaciers outside the polar and sub-polar regions are found in this range.
• The 75 km long Siachen Glacier in Nubra valley has the distinction of being the largest glacier outside
the polar and the sub-polar regions.
• The second largest is the 74 km long Fedchenko Glacier (Pamirs).
• Third largest is the Hispar Glacier. It is 62 km long and occupies a tributary of the Hunza River.
• The longest Sonapani Glacier in the Chandra Valley of Lahul and Spiti region is only 15 km long.
Others
• Glaciers of the Kumaon-Garhwal Region: In the Kumaon-Garhwal region of the Himalayas, the largest is the
30 km long Gangotri Glacier which is the source of the river Ganga.
Garhwal Region
• Lying in the Himalayas, it is bounded on the north by Tibet, on the east by Kumaon region, on
the south by Uttar Pradesh state, and on the northwest by Himachal Pradesh state.
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Garhwal Region
• They intercept the summer monsoons. Without Himalayas India would have been a desert.
• They direct the monsoon winds towards north-western India (Punjab, Haryana etc. But these regions re-
ceive most of the rainfall due to Western Disturbances coming from the Mediterranean regions).
• They protect northern-plains from the cold continental air masses of central Asia.
• All the rivers are perennial supplying water year round.
• Tea is a unique crop which can be grown only on the Shiwalik hill slopes in the region.
• Srinagar, Dalhousie, Dharamshala, Chamba, Shimla, Kulu, Manali, Mussoorie, Nainital, Ranikhet, Al-
mora, Darjeeling, Mirik, Gangtok, etc. are important tourist centres in the Himalayas.
Cultural Tourism
• Kailas, Amarnath, Badrinath, Kedarnath, Vaishnu Devi, Jwalaji, Uttarkashi, Gangotri, Yamunotri, etc.
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• Sela Pass is between Bum La and Bom Di La. Tawang is between Bum La and Sela Pass.
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Major Passes in Himalayas and Indian Sub-continent
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Jammu and Kashmir
Mintaka Pass Kashmir and China Trijunction of India-China and Afghanistan border
Parpik Pass Kashmir and China • East of Mintaka pass on the Indo-China border
Aghil Pass Ladakh with the Xinjiang • 5000 m above sea level.
Province (China) • north of K2 Peak (the highest peak in India)
• The road from Jammu to Srinagar transversed Banihal Pass until 1956 when Jawahar
Tunnel was constructed under the pass.
• The road now passes through the tunnel, and the Banihal Pass is no longer used for
road transport.
• Another 11 km long tunnel provides a railway link between Banihal and Kazigund.
It was thrown open to railway transport in 2013.
Lanak La India and China (Akasai- • this pass provides passage between Ladakh and Lhasa.
Chin area of Jammu and • A road to connect Xinjiang Province with Tibet has been
Kashmir) constructed by the Chinese
Pir-Panjal pass across the Pir Panjal range • provides the shortest and the easiest metal road be-
tween Jammu and Kashmir Valley.
• But this route had to be closed down as a result of the
partition of the subcontinent.
Qara Tag La Indo-China border across • located at an elevation of over six thousand metres
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the Karakoram Range
Pensi La a vital link between the • remains closed to traffic from November to mid-May
Kashmir Valley and Kargil due to heavy snowfall
Zoji La important road link be- • The road passing through this pass has been
tween Srinagar on one designated at the National Highway (NH-1D)
side and Kargil and Leh • Border Road Organisation (BRO) is responsible for
on the other side maintaining the road and cleaning it off snow during
winter.
• In spite of all these efforts, the road through this pass
remains closed from December to mid-May
Himachal Pradesh
Debsa Pass link between Kullu and • elevation of 5270 m above sea level
Spiti districts • It offers a much easier and shorter alternative route to
traditional Pin-Parbati Pass route between Kullu and
Spiti
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Uttarakhand
Niti Pass Uttarakhand with Tibet • Remains closed in the winter season (Nov - Apr)
Muling La Uttarakhand and Tibet • situated in the north of Gangotri at an elevation of 5669
m in the Great Himalayas
Sikkim
Arunachal Pradesh
Dihang Pass Arunachal Pradesh and • elevation of more than 4000 m it provides passage
Myanmar.
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Yonggyap Pass Arunachal Pradesh with
Tibet
Dipher Pass trijunction of India, China • easy access between Arunachal Pradesh and Mandalay
(Diphu pass) and Myanmar in Myanmar.
• It is an important land trade route between India and
Myanmar and remains open throughout the year.
Hpungan Pass
Chankan Pass
4. Indo-Gangetic-Brahmaputra Plain
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Indo-Gangetic-Brahmaputra Plains
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Elevation of the major physiographic divisions of India
The Bhabar
The area is not suitable for agriculture, and only big trees with large roots thrive in this belt.
The Terai
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• Terai is an ill-drained, damp (marshy) and thickly forested narrow tract to the south of Bhabar.
• The Terai is about15-30 km wide.
• The underground streams of the Bhabar belt re-emerge in this belt.
This thickly forested region provides shelter to a variety of wildlife. (Jim Corbett National Park in Utta-
rakhand and Kaziranga National Park in Assam lie in terai region)
• The terai soils are silty and rich in nitrogen and organic matter but are deficient in phosphate.
The Bhangar
• The Bhangar is the older alluvium along the river beds forming terraces higher than the flood plain.
• The terraces are often impregnated with calcareous concretions (beds of lime nodules) known as ‘Kankar’.
• ‘The Barind plains’ in the deltaic region of Bengal and the ‘bhur formations’ in the middle Ganga and
Yamuna doab are regional variations of Bhangar.
The Khadar
• The Khadar is composed of newer alluvium and forms the flood plains along the river banks.
• A new layer of alluvium is deposited by river flood almost every year.
• This makes them the most fertile soils of Ganges.
Reh or Kollar
1. Sindh Plain
2. Rajasthan Plain.
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3. Punjab Plain.
4. Ganga Plain.
5. Brahmaputra Plain.
6. Ganga-Brahmaputra Delta
Rajasthan Plain
• The desert region is called Marusthali and forms a greater part of the Marwar plain.
• Eastern part of the Marusthali is rocky while its western part is covered by shifting sand dunes locally
known as dhrian.
• The eastern part of the Thar Desert up to the Aravalli Range is a semi-arid plain known as Rajasthan Bagar.
• Luni is an important seasonal stream which flows into Rann of Kutch. The tract north of the Luni is known
as thali or sandy plain.
Saline Lakes
• Sambhar, Didwana, Degana, Kuchaman, etc. are some of the important lakes. The largest is the Sambhar
lake near Jaipur.
Punjab Plain
• The plain is primarily made up of ‘doabs’ — the land between two rivers.
• Punjab literally means "(The Land of) Five Waters" referring to the following rivers: the Jhe-
lum, Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej, and Beas.
• The area between the Ghaggar and the Yamuna rivers lies in Haryana and often termed as ‘Haryana Tract’.
It acts as water-divide between the Yamuna and the Satluj rivers.
The only river between the Yamuna and the Satluj is the Ghaggar which is considered to be the present
day successor of the legendary Saraswati River.
Ganga Plain
• Rivers flow sluggishly in the lower sections of Ganges as a result of which the area is marked by local prom-
inences such as levees, bluffs, oxbow lakes, marshes, ravines, etc.
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• Almost all the rivers keep on shifting their courses making this area prone to frequent floods.
• The Kosi river is very notorious in this respect. It has long been called the ‘Sorrow of Bihar’.
• Rohilkhand plains
• Avadh Plains
• Mithila Plain
• Magadh Plain.
Ganga-Brahmaputra Delta
Brahmaputra Plain
• This is also known as the Brahmaputra valley or Assam Valley or Assam Plain.
• The tributaries branch out in many channels giving birth to river meandering leading to the formation of
bill and ox-bow lakes.
5. Peninsular Plateau
• It is a highly stable block composed mostly of the Archaean gneisses and schists.
• It covers a total area of about 16 lakh square km.
• Most of the peninsular rivers flow west to east indicating its general slope.
• Narmada-Tapti are the exceptions which flow from east to west in a rift.
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Minor Plateaus in the Peninsular Plateau
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• It is the plateau of eastern Rajasthan (Marwar plain is to the west of Aravallis whereas Marwar plateau is to
the east).
• It is made up of sandstone, shales and limestones of the Vindhyan period.
• The Banas river, along with its tributaries originate in the Aravalli Range and flow into Chambal river.
Central Highland
Bundelkhand Upland
• Streams like Betwa, Dhasan and Ken flow through the plateau.
Malwa Plateau
• This plateau has two systems of drainage; one towards the Arabian sea (The Narmada, the Tapti and the
Mahi), and the other towards the Bay of Bengal (Chambal and Betwa, joining the Yamuna).
• It is composed of extensive lava flow and is covered with black soils.
Baghelkhand
Chotanagpur Plateau
Meghalaya Plateau
• The peninsular plateau extends further east beyond the Rajmahal hills to from Meghalaya or the Shillong
plateau. The eastward extinction is known as Karbi Anglong plateau.
• Garo-Rajmahal Gap separates this plateau from the main block.
• This gap was formed by down-faulting (normal fault: a block of earth slides downwards).
• It was later filled by sediments deposited by the Ganga and Brahmaputra.
• The western, central and the eastern parts of the plateau are known as the Garo Hills (900 m), the Khasi-
Jaintia Hills (1,500 m) and the Mikir Hills (700 m).
• Shillong (1,961 m) is the highest point of the plateau.
Deccan Plateau
Maharashtra Plateau
• Much of the region is underlain by basaltic rocks of lava origin (Most of the Deccan Traps lies in this re-
gion).
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Step like appearance of Deccan Traps
Karnataka Plateau
Chhattisgarh Plain
• The Chhattisgarh plain is the only plain worth the name in the Peninsular plateau.
• It is a saucer-shaped depression drained by the upper Mahanadi.
• The whole basin lies between the Maikal Range and the Odisha hills.
• The region was once ruled by Haithaivanshi Rajputs from whose thirty-six forts (Chhattisgarh) it derives its
name.
• Most of the hills in the peninsular region are of the relict type (residual hills).
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Major Hill Ranges of the Peninsular Plateau
Aravalli Range
• They run for about 800 km between Delhi and Palanpur in Gujarat.
• They are one of the oldest (very old) fold mountains of the world and the oldest in India.
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• At the south-west extremity, the range rises to over 1,000 m. Here Mt. Abu (1,158 m), a small hilly block, is
separated from the main range by the valley of the Banas.
• Guru Shikhar (1,722 m), the highest peak, is situated in Mt. Abu.
• Pipli Ghat, Dewair and Desuri passes allow movement by roads and railways.
Vindhyan Range
Satpura Range
• It runs in an east-west direction south of the Vindhyas and in between the Narmada and the Tapti.
• Parts of the Satpuras have been folded and upheaved. They are regarded as structural uplift or ‘horst’.
• Dhupgarh (1,350 m) near Pachmarhi on Mahadev Hills is the highest peak.
• Amarkantak (1,127 m) is another important peak.
• The northern section of the Ghats from Tapti valley to a little north of Goa is made of horizontal sheets of
Deccan lavas (Deccan Traps).
• Kalasubai (1,646 m) near Igatpuri, Salher (1,567 m) about 90 km north of Nashik, Mahabaleshwar
(1,438 m) and Harishchandragarh (1,424 m) are important peaks.
• Thal ghat and Bhor ghat are important passes which provide passage by road and rail between the Kon-
kan Plains in the west and the Deccan Plateau in the east.
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• The Nilgiri Hills which join the Sahyadris near the tri-junction of Karnataka, Kerala and TN, rise abruptly to
over 2,000 m.
• They mark the junction of the Western Ghats with the Eastern Ghats.
• Doda Betta (2,637 m) and Makurti (2,554 m) are important peaks of this area.
• The southern part of the Western Ghats is separated from the main Sahyadri range by Pal ghat Gap (Pa-
lakkad Gap).
• Pal ghat Gap it is a rift valley.
• Anai Mudi (2,695 m) is the highest peak in the whole of southern India.
• Three ranges radiate in different directions from Anai Mudi. These ranges are the Anaimalai (1800-2000
m) to the north, the Palani (900-1,200 m) to the north-east and the Cardamom Hills or the Ealaimalai to
the south.
Eastern Ghats
• It is a chain of highly broken and detached hills starting from the Mahanadi in Odisha to the Vagai in
Tamil Nadu. They almost disappear between the Godavari and the Krishna.
• It is only in the northern part, between the Mahanadi and the Godavari that the Eastern Ghats exhibit true
mountain character. This part comprises the Maliya and the Madugula Konda ranges.
• The peaks and ridges of the Maliya range have a general elevation of 900-1,200 m, and Mahendra Giri
(1,501 m) is the tallest peak here.
• The Madugula Konda range has higher elevations ranging from 1,100 m and 1,400 m with several peaks
exceeding 1,600 m. Jindhagada Peak (1690 m) in Araku Valley Arma Konda (1,680 m), Gali Konda
(1,643 m) and Sinkram Gutta (1,620 m) are important peaks.
• Between the Godavari and the Krishna rivers, the Eastern Ghats lose their hilly character and are occupied
by Gondwana formations (KG Basin is here).
• The Eastern Ghats reappear as more or less a continuous hill range in Cuddapah and Kurnool districts of
Andhra Pradesh where they are called as Nallamalai Range (Naxalite hideout in AP).
• The southern part of this range is called the Palkodna range.
• To the south, the hills and plateaus attain very low altitudes; only Javadi Hills and the Shevroy-Kalrayan
Hills form two distinct features of 1,000 m elevation.
• The Biligiri Rangan Hills in Coimbatore district attain a height of 1,279 m.
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The significance of the Peninsular Plateau
• 98 per cent of the Gondwana coal deposits of India are found in the Peninsular Plateau.
• The plateau is also known for its hill resorts such as Udagamangalam (Ooty), Panchmarhi, Kodaikanal,
Mahabaleshwar, Khandala, Matheron, Mount Abu, etc.
6. Coastline of India
Coastline of India
• India has a coastline of 7516.6 Km (6100 km of mainland coastline + coastline of 1197 Indian islands)
touching 13 States and Union Territories (UTs).
• The straight and regular coastline of India is the result of faulting of the Gondwanaland during the Creta-
ceous period.
• As such the coast of India does not offer many sites for good natural harbours.
46
Indented coastlines of Europe provide good natural harbours whereas African and Indian coastlines are
not indented.
• The Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea came into being during the Cretaceous or early Tertiary period
after the disintegration of Gondwanaland.
• Chilka lake and the Pulicat lake (lagoon) are the important geographical features of the east coast.
• The west coast strip extends from the Gulf of Cambay (Gulf of Khambhat) in the north to Cape Comorin
(Kanyakumari).
• Starting from north to south, it is divided into (i) the Konkan coast, (ii) the Karnataka coast and (iii) the
Kerala coast.
• It is made up of alluvium brought down by the short streams originating from the Western Ghats.
• It is dotted with a large number of coves (a very small bay), creeks (a narrow, sheltered waterway such as
an inlet in a shoreline or channel in a marsh) and a few estuaries.
• The estuaries, of the Narmada and the Tapti, are the major ones.
• The Kerala coast (Malabar Coast) has some lakes, lagoons and backwaters, the largest being the Vem-
banad Lake.
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• Bars, spits, lagoons, salt marshes, beaches, sea cliffs and arches are the typical features of emergence.
• Extension of Peninsular plateau (Kathiawar is made of the Deccan Lava and there are tertiary rocks in the
Kutch area).
• Salt-soaked plain to the north of Kutch is the Great Rann. I
• ts southern continuation, known as the Little Rann lies on the coast and south-east of Kachchh.
• The Kathiawar Peninsula lies to the south of the Kachchh.
• The central part is a highland of Mandav Hills from which small streams radiate in all directions (Radial
Drainage). Mt. Girnar (1,117 m) is the highest point and is of volcanic origin.
• The Gir Range is located in the southern part of the Kathiawar peninsula. It is covered with dense forests
and is famous as the home of the Gir lion.
Gujarat Plain
• The Gujarat Plain lies east of Kachchh and Kathiawar and slopes towards the west and south-west.
• Formed by the rivers Narmada, Tapti, Mahi and Sabarmati.
Konkan Plain
• The Thane creek around Mumbai is an important embayment (a recess in a coastline forming a bay) which
provides an excellent natural harbour.
• Goa to Mangalore.
• The Sharavati while descending over such a steep slope makes an impressive waterfall known as Gersoppa
(Jog) Falls which is 271 m high. (Angel falls (979 m) in Venezuela is the highest waterfall on earth. Tugela
Falls (948 m) in Drakensberg mountains in South Africa is the second highest.)
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Kerala Plain
• Extending from the Subarnarekha river along the West Bengal-Odisha border to Kanyakumari.
• This plain is known as the Northern Circars between the Mahanadi and the Krishna rivers and Carnatic
between the Krishna and the Cauvery rivers.
Utkal Plain
• Vembanad Lake (Kerala) is the longest lake in India with a length of 96 km.
• Wular Lake (Jammu and Kashmir), is the largest freshwater lake of India (260 sq km).
• Gobind Ballabh Pant Sagar (Rihand Dam) (UP), is the largest human-made lake of India by volume.
• Shivaji Sagar Lake of Koyna Dam is the largest human-made lake of India by surface area.
• Rajasthan’s Sambhar Lake is the largest inland saltwater lake of India (200 sq km).
• Tso Lhamo Lake (Sikkim) is India’s highest lake (5,330 m) in India.
Andhra Plain
• South of the Utkal Plain and extends up to Pulicat Lake. This lake has been barred by a long sand spit
known as Sriharikota Island (ISRO launch facility).
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• The most significant feature of this plain is the delta formation by the rivers Godavari and Krishna.
• The combined delta has advanced by about 35 km towards the sea during recent years. This is clear from
the present location of the Kolleru Lake which was once a lagoon at the shore but now lies far inland
(Coastline of Emergence).
• This part of the plain has a straight coast and badly lacks good harbours with the exception of Vishakha-
patnam and Machilipatnam.
• The sedimentary rocks of these plains are said to contain large deposits of mineral oil (KG Basin).
• The sands of Kerala coast have a large quantity of monazite which is used for nuclear power.
7. Indian Islands
• The major island groups of India are Andaman and Nicobar Archipelago (a chain of islands similar in origin)
in Bay of Bengal and Lakshadweep islands in the Arabian Sea.
• Andaman and Nicobar Islands were formed due to the collision between Indian Plate and Burma Minor
Plate (part of Eurasian Plate) (Similar to the formation of Himalayas).
• Andaman and Nicobar Islands are the southward extension of Arakan Yoma range (Myanmar) (Arakan
Yoma in itself is an extension of Purvanchal Hills).
• Lakshadweep Islands are coral islands. These islands are a part Reunion Hotspot volcanic chain.
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Reunion Hotspot volcanic chain
• This archipelago is composed of 265 big and small islands (203 Andaman Islands + 62 Nicobar Islands).
• The Andaman Islands are divided into three main islands, i.e. North, Middle and South.
• Duncan passage separates Little Andaman from South Andaman.
• The Great Andaman group of islands in the north is separated by the Ten Degree Channel from the Nico-
bar group in the south (Prelims 2014).
• Port Blair, the capital of Andaman Nicobar Islands, lies in the South Andaman.
• Among the Nicobar Islands, the Great Nicobar is the largest.
• The Car Nicobar is the northernmost island.
• The Barren Island (the only active volcano in India) and Narcondam Islands (an extinct or dormant
volcano), north of Port Blair, are volcanic islands.
• Saddle peak (737 m) in North Andaman is the highest peak.
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Andaman and Nicobar Islands
52
Lakshadweep Islands
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New Moore Island
Brahmaputra ~ 40
Ganga ~ 25
Godavari ~ 6.4
Mahanadi ~ 3.5
Krishna ~ 3.4
Narmada ~ 2.9
Rest ~ 20
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Sl. No. River Length (km)
5. Krishna 1,400
6. Narmada 1,312
7. Yamuna 1211
8. Mahanadi 851
9. Kaveri 800
• The Himalayan Rivers: Perennial rivers: Indus, the Ganga, the Brahmaputra and their tributaries.
• The Peninsular Rivers: Non-Perennial rivers: Mahanadi, the Godavari, the Krishna, the Cauvery, the
Narmada and the Tapti and their tributaries.
• Rivers of the inland drainage basin (endorheic basin). Streams like the Sambhar in western Rajasthan are
mainly seasonal in character, draining into the inland basins and salt lakes.
• In the Rann of Kutch, the only river that flows through the salt desert is the Luni.
• The Bay of Bengal drainage (Rivers that drain into the Bay of Bengal) (East flowing rivers)
• The Arabian sea drainage (Rivers that drain into the Arabian sea) (West flowing rivers).
Rivers that drain into the Bay of Bengal Rivers that drain into the Arabian sea
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East flowing rivers West flowing rivers
~ 77 per cent of the drainage area of the country is ~ 23 per cent of the drainage area of the country is
oriented towards the Bay of Bengal oriented towards the Arabian sea
The Ganga, the Brahmaputra, the Mahanadi, the The Indus, the Narmada, the Tapti, the Sabarmati, the
Godavari, the Krishna, the Cauvery, the Penneru, the Mahi and the large number of swift flowing western
Penneiyar, the Vaigai, etc. coast rivers descending from the Sahyadris.
• Over 90 per cent of the water drains into the Bay of Bengal; the rest is drained into the Arabian Sea
or forms inland drainage.
(Why the Bay of Bengal receives more fresh water compared to the Arabian Sea?)
• The Arabian Sea drainage or Western drainage receive less rainfall (Rajasthan, Haryana and Punjab receive
very low rainfall).
• The Eastern drainage or the Bay of Bengal drainage receives rainfall both from South-west and North-east
monsoons.
• Most of the Himalayan waters (perennial rivers) flow into eastern drainage (Ganges and Brahmaputra).
• Indian Rivers that flow into the Arabian Sea are seasonal or non-perennial (Luni, Narmada, etc.).
• The occurrence of more cyclonic rainfall in the eastern parts is another major reason.
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57
22 basins as per the Central Water Commission
• The names of the basins along with their id and area are given in the table.
2 2A Ganga 8,61,452 1
3 2B Brahmaputra 1,94,413 6
5 3 Godavari 3,12,812 4
6 4 Krishna 2,58,948 5
7 5 Cauvery 81,155 11
8 6 Subernarekha 29,196
10 8 Mahanadi 1,41,589 7
11 9 Pennar 55,213
12 10 Mahi 34,842
13 11 Sabarmati 21,674
14 12 Narmada 98,796 9
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Major Rivers and Lakes of India
59
Himalayan Rivers
Indus • Kailas Range (Close to Manasarovar Lake) • 1114 km in India (2880 km total)
Descending order according to length: Indus – Sutlej – Chenab – Ravi – Jhelum – Beas.
Left to Right: Indus – Jhelum – Chenab – Ravi – Beas – Sutlej.
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Indus River
• It flows in the north-west direction from its source (Glaciers of Kailas Range – Kailash range in Tibet near
Lake Manasarovar) till the Nanga Parbat Range.
• Dhar River joins it near Indo-China border.
• After entering J&K, it flows between the Ladakh and the Zaskar Ranges.
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62
Indus River System
• It is joined by the Zaskar River at Leh (these kind of points are important for prelims).
• Near Skardu, it is joined by the Shyok at an elevation of about 2,700 m.
• The Gilgit, Gartang, Dras, Shiger, Hunza are the other Himalayan tributaries of the Indus.
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• It crosses the Himalayas through a 5181 m deep gorge, lying north of the Nanga Parbat.
• It takes a sharp southerly bend here (syntaxial bend).
• Kabul river from Afghanistan joins Indus near Attock.
• Thereafter it flows through the Potwar plateau and crosses the Salt Range (South Eastern edge of Potwar
Plateau).
• Just above Mithankot, the Indus receives from Panjnad (Panchnad), the accumulated waters of the five
eastern tributaries—the Jhelum, the Chenab, the Ravi, the Beas and the Sutlej.
Jhelum River
• The Jhelum has its source in a spring at Verinag in the south-eastern part of the Kashmir Valley.
• It flows northwards into Wular Lake (north-western part of Kashmir Valley).
• From Wular Lake, it changes its course southwards. At Baramulla, the river enters a gorge in the hills.
• The river forms steep-sided narrow gorge through Pir Panjal Range below Baramula.
• After flowing through the spurs of the Salt Range, it debouches (emerge from a confined space into a
wide, open area) on the plains near the city of Jhelum.
• It joins the Chenab at Trimmu.
Chenab River
• The Chenab originates from near the Bara Lacha Pass in the Lahul-Spiti part of the Zaskar Range.
• Two small streams, namely Chandra and Bhaga, form its headwaters at an altitude of 4,900 m.
Ravi River
• The Ravi has its source in Kullu hills near the Rohtang Pass in Himachal Pradesh.
Beas River
• The Beas originates near the Rohtang Pass, at a height of 4,062 m above sea level, on the southern end
of the Pir Panjal Range, close to the source of the Ravi.
• It is a comparatively small river which is only 460 km long but lies entirely within the Indian territory.
Sutlej River
• The Sutlej rises from the Manasarovar-Rakas Lakes in western Tibet at the height of 4,570 m within 80 km
of the source of the Indus.
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• Before entering the Punjab plain, it cuts a gorge in Naina Devi Dhar, where the famous Bhakra dam (also
known as Bhakra-Nangal Dam. The dam forms the Gobind Sagar reservoir) has been constructed.
• India and Pakistan share the waters of the Indus river system according to the Indus Water Treaty signed
between the two countries on 19th September 1960.
• According to this treaty, India can utilise only 20 per cent of its total discharge of water.
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Ganga River System
River Source
The Kali River (the border between Nepal and Utta- Glaciers of trans-Himalayas
rakhand)
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Gandak River Tibet-Nepal border
Kosi (‘Sorrow of Bihar’) Tumar, Arun and Sun Kosi unite at Triveni north of the
Mahabharata Range to form the Kosi.
Ganga River
• The Ganga originates as Bhagirathi from the Gangotri glacier in Uttar Kashi District of Uttarakhand at an
elevation of 7,010 m.
• Alaknanda River joins Bhagirathi at Devaprayag.
• From Devapryag the river is called as Ganga.
• Pollution threatens many fish species and amphibian species and the endangered Ganges river dolphin
(Blind Dolphin).
• Ganga debouches (emerge from a confined space into a wide, open area) from the hills into plain area at
Haridwar.
• It is joined by the Yamuna at Prayagraj (Allahabad).
• At Farraka, it bifurcates into Bhagirathi-Hugli in West Bengal and Padma-Meghna in Bangladesh (it
ceases to be known as the Ganga after Farraka).
• Brahmaputra (or the Jamuna as it is known here) joins Padma-Meghna at Goalundo.
Ganga-Brahmaputra Delta
• Before entering the Bay of Bengal, the Ganga, along with the Brahmaputra, forms the largest delta of the
world between the Bhagirathi/Hugli and the Padma/Meghna covering an area of 58,752 sq km.
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• Most of them except the Yamuna originate in the peninsular region.
Yamuna River
68
Yamuna River System
Chambal River
• The Chambal rises in the highlands of Janapao Hills (700 m) in the Vindhyan Range.
• The Gandhi Sagar dam is the first of the four dams built on the Chambal River, located on the Rajasthan-
Madhya Pradesh border.
• The Rana Pratap Sagar dam is located downstream of Gandhi Sagar dam.
• The Jawahar Sagar Dam is located downstream of Rana Pratap Sagar dam.
• The Kota Barrage is the fourth in the series located upstream of Kota City in Rajasthan.
Keoladeo National Park is supplied with water from the Chambal river irrigation project.
The Banas
The Sind
The Betwa
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• The Betwa rises in Bhopal district (Vindhyan Range) and joins the Yamuna near Hamirpur.
The Ken
• The Ken river rising from the Barner Range of Madhya Pradesh joins the Yamuna near Chila.
The Son
Damodar River
• The Damodar river rises in the hills of the Chotanagpur plateau and flows through a rift valley.
• Rich in mineral resources, the valley is home to large-scale mining and industrial activity.
• It has a number of tributaries and sub-tributaries, such as Barakar, Konar, Bokaro, Haharo, etc.
• The valley is called “the Ruhr of India”.
• The first dam was built across the Barakar River, a tributary of the Damodar river.
• It used to cause devastating floods as a result of which it earned the name ‘Sorrow of Bengal’.
• It joins the Hugli River 48 km below Kolkata.
• The major tributaries apart from the Yamuna, are the Ramganga, the Gomati, the Ghaghra, the Gandak,
the Burhi Gandak, the Bagmati, and the Kosi.
Ramganga River
Ghaghra River
• Its source is near Gurla Mandhata peak, south of Manasarovar in Tibet (river of the trans-Himalayan
origin).
• It is known as the Karnaili in Western Nepal.
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• Its important tributaries are the Sarda, the Sarayu (also known as Sarju) (Ayodhya is located on its
bank) and the Rapti.
Kali River
Gandak River
Burhi Gandak
• Originates from the western slopes of Sumesar hills near the India-Nepal border.
• It joins the Ganga near Monghyr town.
Kosi River
• The Kosi river consists of seven streams namely and is popularly known as Saptkaushiki.
• These streams flow through eastern Nepal which is known as the Sapt Kaushik region.
• Seven streams mingle with each other to form three streams named the Tumar, Arun and Sun Kosi.
• They unite at Triveni north of the Mahabharata Range to form the Kosi.
• The joins the Ganga near Kursela.
• The river channel is braided, and it shifts its course frequently.
• This has resulted in frequent devastating floods and has converted large tracts of cultivable land into
wasteland in Bihar. Thus, the river is often termed as the ‘Sorrow of Bihar’.
Region Name
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Tibet Tsangpo (meaning 'The Purifier')
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• Here it cuts across the eastern Himalaya through the Dihang or Siang Gorge and emerges from the
mountains near Sadiya in the Assam Valley.
• Here it first flows under the name of Siong and then as the Dihang.
• In the north-eastern parts of Assam Valley, it is joined by two important tributaries viz, the Dibang (or Si-
kang) from the north and Lohit from the south.
• From Sadiya (Assam Valley) onwards, this mighty river is known as the Brahmaputra.
• The main streams merging with the Brahmaputra from the north are, Subansiri, Kameng, Dhansiri
(north), Raidak, Tista etc.
• The Tista was a tributary of the Ganga before the floods of 1787.
• The Brahmaputra has a braided channel for most of its passage through Assam.
• It carries a lot of silt, and there is excessive meandering.
• The river is nearly 16 km wide at Dibrugarh and forms many islands, the most important of which is Majuli
(world's largest river island). It is 90 km long and measures 20 km at its widest.
• The river is navigable for a distance of 1,384 km up to Dibrugarh from its mouth.
• The Brahmaputra bends southwards and enters Bangladesh near Dhubri.
• It flows for a distance of 270 km in the name of Jamuna river and joins the Ganga at Goalundo.
• The united stream of the Jamuna and the Ganga flows further in the name of Padma.
• About 105 km further downstream, the Padma is joined on the left bank by the Meghna, originating in the
mountainous region of Assam.
• From the confluence of Padma and Meghna, the combined river is known as the Meghna which makes a
very broad estuary before pouring into the Bay of Bengal.
• Left Bank Tributaries: Dibang, Lohit, Dhansiri, Kolong.
• Right Bank Tributaries: Kameng, Manas, Raidak, Jaldhaka, Teesta, Subansiri
• Rivers that drain into the Bay of Bengal: The Mahanadi, the Godavari, the Krishna, the Cauvery and
several smaller rivers drains south-east into the Bay of Bengal.
• Rivers that drain into the Arabian Sea: The Narmada, the Tapti, the Mahi flowing west as well as sever-
al small streams originating from the Western Ghats flow westwards into the Arabian Sea.
• Rivers that drain into the Ganges: Tributaries of the Ganga and the Yamuna such as the Chambal, the
Betwa, the Ken, the Son and the Damodar flow in the north-easterly direction.
• Peninsula rivers are much older than the Himalayan rivers.
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• The peninsular drainage is mainly concordant except for few rivers in the upper peninsular region.
• They are non-perennial rivers with a maximum discharge in the rainy season.
• The peninsular rivers have reached a mature stage and have almost reached their base level.
• Most of the major rivers of the peninsula such as the Mahanadi, the Godavari, the Krishna and the Cauvery
flow eastwards and drain into the Bay of Bengal. These rivers make deltas at their mouths.
• But the west flowing rivers of Narmada and Tapti as well as those originating from the Western Ghats and
falling in the Arabian Sea form estuaries in place of deltas.
• There are few places where rivers form superimposed and rejuvenated drainage which are represented by
waterfalls.
• Examples: The Jog (289 m) on the Sharvati river, Yenna (183 m) of Mahabaleshwar, Sivasamundram
(101 m) on the Cauvery river, Gokak (55 m) on the Gokak river, Kapildhara (23 m) and Dhuandar (15
m) on the Narmada river are the major waterfalls in the Peninsular India.
• The western part of the Peninsula cracked and submerged in the Arabian Sea during the early Tertiary pe-
riod (coinciding with the formation of Himalayas).
• During the collision of the Indian plate, the Peninsular block was subjected to subsidence in few regions
creating a series of rifts (trough, faults).
• The now west flowing rivers of the Peninsula, namely the Narmada and the Tapti flow through these
rifts.
• Straight coastline, steep western slope of the Western Ghats, and the absence of delta formations on
the west coast make this theory a possibility.
Origin • These rivets originate from the lofty • These rivers originate in the hills of Penin-
Himalayan ranges and are named as sular Plateau and are named as Peninsular
the Himalayan rivers. rivers.
Catchment ar- • These rivers have large basins and • These rivers have comparatively small ba-
ea catchment areas. sins and catchment areas.
• The total basin area of the Indus, the • The Godavari has the largest basin area of
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Ganga and the Brahmaputra are 11.78, 3.12 lakh square kilometres.
8.61 and 5.8 lakh square kilometres re-
spectively.
Valleys • The Himalayan rivers flow through • The Peninsular rivers flow in comparatively
deep V-shaped valleys called gorges. shallow valleys.
• These gorges have been carved out by • These are more or less completely graded
down cutting carried on side by side valleys.
with the uplift of the Himalayas. • The rivers have little erosional activity to
perform.
Drainage Type • These are examples of antecedent • These are examples of consequent drain-
drainage. age.
Water Flow • The Himalayan rivers are perennial in • The Peninsular rivers receive water only
nature, i.e., water flows throughout the from rainfall and water flows in these rivers
year in these rivers. in rainy season only.
• These rivers receive water both from • Therefore, these rivers are seasonal or non-
the monsoons and snow-melt. perennial.
• The perennial nature of these rivers • As such these rivers are much less useful
makes them useful for irrigation. for irrigation.
Stage • These rivers flow across the young fold • These rivers have been flowing in one of
mountains and are still in a youthful the oldest plateaus of the world and have
stage. reached maturity.
Meanders • When they enter the plains, there is a • The hard rock surface and non-alluvial
sudden reduction in the speed of flow character of the plateau permits little
of water. scope for the formation of meanders.
• Under these circumstances, these rivers • As such, the rivers of the Peninsular Plateau
form meanders and often shift their follow more or less straight courses.
beds.
Deltas and Es- • The Himalayan rivers form big deltas at • Some of the Peninsular rivers, such as the
tuaries their mouths. Narmada and the Tapti form estuaries.
• Ganga-Brahmaputra delta is the larg- • Other rivers such as the Mahanadi, the
est in the world. Godavari, the Krishna and the Cauvery
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form deltas.
• Several small streams originating from the
Western Ghats and flowing towards the
west enter the Arabian Sea without form-
ing any delta.
• Mahanadi River
• Godavari River
• Krishna River
• Kaveri (Cauvery) River
• Pennar River
• Subarnarekha River
• Brahmani River
• Sarada River
• Ponnaiyar River
• Vaigai River
Mahanadi River
• Most of the the Mahanadi basin extends over states of Chhattisgarh and Odisha.
• Its upper course lies in the saucer-shaped basin called the Chhattisgarh Plain.
• It is bounded by the Central India hills on the north, by the Eastern Ghats on the south and east and by the
Maikal range on the west.
• The Mahanadi (Great River) has its source in the northern foothills of Dandakaranya in Raipur District of
Chhattisgarh at an elevation of 442 m.
• Other small streams draining directly into the Chilka Lake also forms the part of the Mahanadi basin.
• After receiving the Seonath River, it turns east and enters Odisha state.
• At Sambalpur, the Hirakud Dam (one of the largest dams in India) on the river has formed a human-made
lake 35 miles (55 km) long.
• It enters the Odisha plains near Cuttack and enters the Bay of Bengal at False Point by several channels.
• Puri, at one of its mouths, is a famous pilgrimage site.
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Tributaries of Mahanadi River
• Left bank Tributaries: The Seonath, the Hasdeo, the Mand and the Ib.
• Right bank Tributaries: The Ong, the Tel and the Jonk.
• Mahanadi main canal, Tandula reservoir in Chhattisgarh, Hirakud dam, Mahanadi delta project,
Hasdeo Bango, Mahanadi Reservoir Project.
• Because of its rich mineral resource and adequate power resource, has a favourable industrial climate.
• The Important industries presently existing in the basin are the Iron and Steel plant at Bhilai, aluminium
factories at Hirakud and Korba, etc.
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• The multi-purpose Hirakud dam provides some amount of flood relief by storing part of flood water.
Godavari River
• The Godavari is the largest river system of Peninsular India and is revered as Dakshin Ganga.
• The Godavari basin extends over states of Maharashtra, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and
Odisha.
• The basin is bounded by Satmala hills, the Ajanta range and the Mahadeo hills on the north, by the East-
ern Ghats on the south and the east and by the Western Ghats on the west.
• The Godavari River rises from Trimbakeshwar in the Nashik district of Maharashtra.
• The Manjra (724 km) is the only important right bank tributary. It joins the Godavari after passing through
the Nizam Sagar reservoir.
• Left Bank Tributaries: Dharna, Penganga, Wainganga, Wardha, Pranahita (conveying the combined wa-
ters of Penganga, the Wardha and Wainganga), Pench, Kanha, Sabari, Indravati etc.
• Right Bank Tributaries: Pravara, Mula, Manjra, Peddavagu, Maner etc.
• Below Rajahmundry, the river divides itself into two main streams, the Gautami Godavari on the east and
the Vashishta Godavari on the west and forms a large delta before it pours into the Bay of Bengal.
• The delta of the Godavari is of the lobate type with a round bulge and many distributaries.
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Tributaries of Godavari River
• The upper reaches of the Godavari drainage basin are occupied by the Deccan Traps containing minerals
like magnetite, epidote, biotite, zircon, chlorite etc. (metallic minerals).
• The middle part of the basin is principally composed of phyllites, quartzites, amphiboles and granites
(rocks).
• The downstream part of the middle basin is occupied mainly by sediments and rocks of the Gondwana
group.
• The Gondwanas are principally detritals with some thick coal seams. E.g. Singareni Coal Seam (Telanga-
na).
• The Eastern Ghats dominate the lower part of the drainage basin and are formed mainly from the Khonda-
lites.
Krishna River
• The Krishna Basin extends over Maharashtra, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, and Karnataka.
• It is bounded by Balaghat range on the north, by the Eastern Ghats on the south and the east and by the
Western Ghats on the west.
• The Krishna River rises from the Western Ghats near Jor village of Satara district of Maharashtra at an
altitude of 1,337 m just north of Mahabaleshwar.
• Important ones are the Tungabhadra, Ghataprabha, Nagarjunasagar, Malaprabha, Bhima, Bhadra and
Telugu Ganga.
• The major Hydro Power stations in the basin are Koyna, Tungabhadara, Sri Sailam, Nagarjuna Sagar,
Almatti, Naryanpur, Bhadra.
• Krishna Godavari Basin (K-G Basin) is known for the D-6 block where Reliance Industries discovered the
biggest natural gas reserves in India in 2003.
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Tributaries of Krishna River
Cauvery River
• The Kaveri (Cauvery) is designated as the Dakshin Ganga or the Ganga of the South.
The Godavari is known as Dakshin Ganga for its size and Kaveri is also sometimes referred to as Dakshin Ganga
because of its spiritual significance. But if you have to choose only one among these then Godavari is the
Dakshin Ganga or the Ganga of the South.
• The Cauvery River rises at an elevation of 1,341 m at Talakaveri on the Brahmagiri range, Kodagu
(Coorg) district of Karnataka.
• The Cauvery basin extends over states of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala and Union Territory of
Puducherry.
• Red soils occupy large areas in the basin. Alluvial soils are found in the delta areas.
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• Its upper catchment area receives rainfall during summer by the south-west monsoon and the lower
catchment area during the winter season by the retreating north-east monsoon.
• It is, therefore, almost a perennial river with comparatively fewer fluctuations in flow and is very useful
for irrigation and hydroelectric power generation.
• Thus, the Cauvery is one of the best-regulated rivers, and most of its irrigation and power production po-
tential already stands harnessed.
• Left Bank: the Harangi, the Hemavati, the Shimsha and the Arkavati.
• Right Bank: Lakshmantirtha, the Kabbani, the Suvarnavati, the Bhavani, the Noyil and the Amaravati
joins from the right.
• The river descends from the South Karnataka Plateau to the Tamil Nadu Plains through the Shivanasam-
udram waterfalls (101 m high).
• At Shivanasamudram, the river branches off into two parts and falls through a series of falls and rapids.
• The two branches of the river join after the fall and flow through a wide gorge which is known as Mekeda-
tu (Goats leap) (Mekedatu falls is here).
• At Hogennekkal Falls, it takes Southerly direction and enters the Mettur Reservoir.
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Tributaries of the Cauvery River
• The Cauvery basin is fan-shaped in Karnataka and leaf-shaped in Tamil Nadu. The run-off does not drain
off quickly because of its shape, and therefore no fast raising floods occur in the basin.
• During the pre-plan period, many projects were completed in this basin which included Krishnarajasagar
in Karnataka, Mettur dam and Cauvery delta system in Tamil Nadu.
• Lower Bhavani, Hemavati, Harangi, Kabini are important projects completed during the plan period.
• Important industries in the basin include the cotton textile industry in Coimbatore and Mysore.
Pennar River
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• The Pennar (also known as Uttara Pinakini) rises in the Chenna Kesava hill of the Nandidurg range, in
Chikkaballapura district of Karnataka.
• The fan-shaped basin is bounded by the Erramala range on the north, by the Nallamala and Velikonda
ranges of the Eastern Ghats on the east, by the Nandidurg hills on the south and by the narrow ridge sep-
arating it from the Vedavati valley of the Krishna Basin on the west.
• The other hill ranges in the basin to the south of the river are the Seshachalam (famous for Red Sanders)
and Paliconda ranges.
Subarnarekha
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• The Subarnarekha originates from the Ranchi Plateau in Jharkhand forming the boundary between West
Bengal and Odisha in its lower course.
• It joins the Bay of Bengal forming an estuary between the Ganga and Mahanadi deltas.
Subarnarekha Basin
Brahmani River
• The Brahmani river comes into existence by the confluence of the Koel and the Sankh rivers near Rourke-
la.
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Sarada River
• The river Sarada, an East flowing medium-sized river, lies in the district of Visakhapatnam of Andhra Pra-
desh.
Ponnaiyar River
• The Ponnaiyar is a small stream which is confined to the coastal area only.
• It covers a small area in the state of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh.
Vaigai River
• South of the Cauvery delta, there are several streams, of which the Vaigai is the longest.
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Minor East flowing rivers in Peninsular India
• The two major west flowing rivers are the Narmada and the Tapti.
• This exceptional behaviour is because these rivers didn’t form valleys and instead, they flow through
faults (linear rift, rift valley, trough) created due to the bending of the northern peninsula during the
formation process of Himalayas.
• These faults run parallel to the Vindhyas and the Satpuras.
• The Sabarmati, Mahi and Luni are other rivers of Peninsular India which flow westwards.
• Hundreds of small streams originating in the Western Ghats flow swiftly westwards and join the Arabian
Sea.
• Peninsular rivers which fall into the Arabian Sea do not form deltas, but only estuaries.
• This is due to the fact that the west flowing rivers, especially the Narmada and the Tapti flow through hard
rocks and hence do not carry any good amount of silt.
• Moreover, the tributaries of these rivers are very small, and hence they don’t contribute any silt.
• Hence these rivers are not able to form distributaries or a delta before they enter the sea.
Estuary
Estuary
• An estuary is a partially enclosed body of water along the coast.
• Primary productivity in estuaries is very high.
• Most of the estuaries are good bird sanctuaries.
• Although influenced by the tides, they are protected from the full force of ocean waves, winds, and
storms by such landforms as barrier islands or peninsulas. (estuaries make good ports. E.g. New York
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Harbour is at the mouth of the Hudson River; Mormugao port in Goa at the mouth of the Zuari river
and Mondovi river)
• Estuarine environments are among the most productive on earth, creating more organic matter each
year than comparably-sized areas of forest, grassland, or agricultural land.
Narmada River
• Since the river flows through a narrow valley confined by precipitous (dangerously high or steep) hills, it
does not have many tributaries.
Tapti River
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• The Tapti (also known as the Tapti) is the second largest west flowing river of Peninsular India and is
known as 'the twin' or 'the handmaid' of the Narmada.
• It originates near Multai reserve forest in Madhya Pradesh at an elevation of 752 m.
• Flows for about 724 km before entering into the Arabian Sea through the Gulf of Cambay (Gulf of
Khambhat).
• The Tapti River along with its tributaries flows over the plains of Vidharbha, Khandesh and Gujarat and
large areas in the state of Maharashtra and a small area in Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat.
• Situated in the Deccan plateau, the basin is bounded by the Satpura range on the north, Mahadev hills on
the east, Ajanta Range and the Satmala hills on the south and by the Arabian Sea on the west.
• There are two well defined physical regions, in the basin, viz hilly region and plains; the hilly regions com-
prising Satpura, Satmalas, Mahadeo, Ajanta and Gawilgarh hills are well forested.
• The plain covers the Khandesh areas (Khandesh is a region of central India, which forms the northwestern
portion of Maharashtra state) which are broad and fertile suitable for cultivation primarily.
• Right Bank: the Suki, the Gomai, the Arunavati and the Aner.
• Left Bank: the Vaghur, the Amravati, the Buray, the Panjhra, the Bori, the Girna, the Purna, the Mona
and the Sipna.
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Sabarmati River
• The Sabarmati is the name given to the combined streams the Sabar and Hathmati.
• The Sabarmati basin extends over states of Rajasthan and Gujarat.
• Sabarmati originates from Aravalli hills in Udaipur district of Rajasthan.
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Sabarmati River
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Industry in Sabarmati Basin
• Gandhinagar and Ahmedabad are the important urban centres in the basin.
• Ahmedabad is an industrial city situated on the banks of Sabarmati.
Mahi River
• The Mahi basin extends over states of Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Gujarat.
• It is bounded by Aravalli hills on the north and the north-west, by Malwa Plateau on the east, by the Vin-
dhyas on the south and by the Gulf of Khambhat on the west.
• It originates from the northern slopes of Vindhyas at an altitude of 500 m in Dhar district of Madhya Pra-
desh.
• It drains into the Arabian Sea through the Gulf of Khambhat.
• Vadodara is the only important urban centre in the basin. There are not many industries in the basin.
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Mahi Basin
Luni River
• The Luni or the Salt River (Lonari in Sanskrit) is named so because its water is brackish below Balotra.
• Luni is the only river basin of any significance in Western Rajasthan, which forms the bulk of arid zone.
• Luni originates from western slopes of the Aravalli ranges at an elevation of 772 m near Ajmer flowing in
South West direction and traversing a course of 511 km in Rajasthan; it finally flows into the Rann of Ka-
chchh (it gets lost in the marsh).
Luni Basin
• Some rivers of India are not able to reach the sea and constitute inland drainage.
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• Large parts of the Rajasthan desert and parts of Aksai Chin in Ladakh have inland drainage.
• The Ghaggar is the most important river of inland drainage.
• It is a seasonal stream which rises on the lower slopes of the Himalayas and forms boundary between Har-
yana and Punjab.
• It gets lost in the dry sands of Rajasthan.
1. Indian Monsoons
• Monsoons are seasonal winds (Periodic Winds or Secondary winds) which reverse their direction with
the change of season.
• India, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Myanmar etc. receive most of the annual rainfall during south-west
monsoon season whereas South East China, Japan etc., during north-east rainfall season.
• South-west monsoons bring rainfall to most of the regions in India and north-east monsoons bring rain-
fall to mainly Southern coast of Andhra Pradesh and the coast of Tamil Nadu.
• South-west monsoons are formed due to intense low-pressure system formed over the Tibetan plateau.
• North-east monsoons are associated with high-pressure cells over Tibetan and Siberian plateaus.
• Above points +
• Subtropical Jet Stream (STJ).
• Tropical Easterly Jet (African Easterly Jet).
• Inter Tropical Convergence Zone.
• Strengths of Low pressure over Tibet and high pressure over the southern Indian Ocean.
• Somali Jet (Findlater Jet).
• Somali Current (Findlater Current).
• Indian Ocean branch of Walker Cell (explained in El Nino).
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• Indian Ocean Dipole.
• Formation and strengthening of high-pressure cells over Tibetan plateau and Siberian Plateau in
winter.
• Westward migration and subsequent weakening of high-pressure cell in the Southern Indian Ocean.
• Migration of ITCZ to the south of India.
Classical Theory
• In the tenth century, Al Masudi, an Arab explorer, gave an account of the reversal of ocean currents and
the monsoon winds over the north Indian Ocean.
• In the seventeenth century, Sir Edmund Halley explained the monsoon as resulting from thermal contrasts
between continents and oceans due to their differential heating.
• This theory considers Indian Monsoons as Land and Sea Breeze on a large scale.
Modern Theories
• Besides differential heating, the development of monsoon is influenced by the shape of the continents,
orography (mountains), and the conditions of air circulation in the upper troposphere (jet streams).
March to May
• As the summertime approaches, there is increased solar heating of the Indian subcontinent and the Tibetan
Plateau.
• During March to May, the building up of the monsoon cell is blocked by the STJ which tends to blow
to the south of the Himalayas.
• Northwest India and Plains region are occupied by Subtropical High-Pressure Belt. This high-pressure belt
undermines the influence of low-pressure cell over Tibet.
• As long as the STJ is in this position the development of summer monsoons is inhibited (the high-
pressure belt stays over north India).
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Between Late May and Early June
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• In the peak summer months (25th of May – 10th of Jun), with the apparent northward movement of the
sun, the southern branch of the Sub-Tropical Jetstream (STJ), which flows to the south of the Himalayas,
shifts to the north of the Himalayas.
• When the sun’s position is about to reach the Tropic of Cancer (June), the STJ shifts to the north of the
Tibetan Plateau (1st of Jun – 20th of June).
• The ITCZ is close to its peak position over the Tibetan Plateau.
• The altitude of the mountains initially disrupts the jet, but once it has cleared the summits, it is able to re-
form over central Asia.
• Its movement towards the north is one of the main features associated with the onset of the monsoon over
India.
• With the northward shift of STJ, an Easterly Jet is formed over the Indian plains. It generally forms in
the first week of June and lasts till late October.
• It can be traced in the upper troposphere right up to the west coast of Africa.
• The northward shift of STJ and ICTZ moves the subtropical high-pressure belt to the north of the Ti-
betan Plateau, and the Easterly Jet creates a low-pressure region in the Indian plains (Easterly Jet cre-
ates anticyclonic conditions in upper troposphere).
• With the STJ out of the way (high-pressure belt migrates to the north of Tibet) the subcontinental mon-
soon cell develops very quickly indeed, often in a matter of a few days.
• The low pressure in the northern plains coupled with the intense low of the Tibetan Plateau leads to the
sudden onset of south-west monsoons (1st of Jun – 20th of June).
• The monsoon cell is situated between the Indian Ocean (North of Madagascar) (High-Pressure Cell) and
Tibetan plateau (Low-Pressure Cell).
Rainy season
• The sub-tropical easterly jet fluctuates between the plains region of India and peninsular India vary-
ing the intensity of rainfall from location to location.
• Warmth and moisture are fed into the cell by a lower level tropical jet stream (Somali Jet) which brings
with its air masses laden with moisture from the Indian Ocean.
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The end of Monsson season
• The end of the monsoon season is brought about when the atmosphere over the Tibetan Plateau begins to
cool (August – October), this enables the STJ to transition back across the Himalayas.
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• With the southward shift of ITCZ, subtropical high-pressure belt returns to the Indian plains, and the
rainfall ceases.
• This leads to the formation of an anticyclonic winter monsoon cell typified by sinking air masses over
India and relatively moisture free winds that blow seaward.
• This gives rise to relatively settled and dry weather over India during the winter months.
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Indian Monsoons – Role of ITCZ (Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone)
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Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ)
• The front where the south-west monsoons meet the north-east trade winds is known as the Monsoon
Front (ITCZ). Rainfall occurs along this front.
• In July, the ITCZ shifts to 20°- 25° N latitude.
• The ITCZ in this position is often called the Monsoon Trough (maximum rainfall).
• Sub-Tropical Jet stream plays a significant role in both hindering the monsoon winds as well as in
quick onset of monsoons.
Western Disturbances
• The southern branch of the jet stream is responsible for steering of the western depressions (Western
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Disturbances) from the Mediterranean Sea.
• These depressions are residual frontal cyclones. On the way, they pick up moisture from the Caspian Sea
and the Black Sea.
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Path of Western Disturbances
• The arrival of these temperate storms (remnants of temperate cyclones) (western disturbances) causes pre-
cipitation leading to an abrupt decrease in air temperature over North-West India.
• Winter rain and heat storms in north-western plains, occasional heavy snowfall in hilly regions and
cold waves in the whole of northern plains are caused by these disturbances.
• The western disturbances affect weather conditions during the winter season up to Patna (Bihar) and give
occasional rainfall which is highly beneficial for the standing rabi crops (wheat, barley, mustard, gram,
lentil, etc.).
• Reason 1: ITCZ has left India (the winds that blow over India are mostly offshore –– land to land or land to
the ocean –– so they carry no moisture).
• Reason 2: During winter, the southern branch of STJ is strong and is to the south of Himalayas. The ridge
of the jet lies over north-western India and is associated with strong divergence of winds and creates a
high-pressure region (sub-tropical high-pressure belt) over entire north India. (This is how the mechanism
of jet streams influence Indian Monsoons in winter season)
• Reason 3: There is already a strong high pressure over Tibet. (High Pressure due to STJ + High Pressure
over Tibet = strong divergence = no rainfall)
• There is good sun’s insolation from March-May but still, there are no s-w monsoons.
Reason: The ridge region of the Southern branch of STJ creates strong divergence (high pressure) in
north-west India. The diverging air blocks incoming winds and prevents strong convergence of winds
along ITCZ.
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Cloudburst
• A cloudburst is an intense torrential rainfall brought by a thunderstorm that lasts for a relatively short du-
ration (few minutes to few hours).
• Cloudburst leads to flash floods and causes a lot of damage to life and property.
• Every intense rainfall is not a Cloudburst. Cloudburst specifically occurs when an air mass with high humid-
ity is struck at a place due to various reasons.
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Trough and Ridge Region in Meandering Sub-Tropical Jet Stream
Indian Monsoons – Role of Tropical Easterly Jet (TEJ) (African Easterly Jet)
• TEJ is caused by the uniquely high temperatures and heights over the Tibetan Plateau during summer.
• The TEJ plays an important role in kick-starting southwest monsoon.
• This jet descends over the Indian Ocean (near Madagascar) and intensifies its high-pressure cell.
• There are major high-velocity winds in the lower troposphere called low-level jets (LLJs).
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• In the tropics, the most prominent of these are the Somali Jet and the African Easterly Jet (Tropical East-
erly Jet).
• The TEJ is found near between 5° and 20°N.
• The formation of TEJ results in the reversal of upper air circulation patterns (High-pressure switches to
low pressure) and leads to the quick onset of monsoons.
• The easterly jet does not come into existence if the snow over the Tibet Plateau does not melt. This
hampers the occurrence of rainfall in India.
• Because the Tibet Plateau is a source of heat for the atmosphere, it generates an area of rising air.
• During its ascent, the air spreads outwards in the upper troposphere (divergence) and gradually sinks (sub-
sidence) over the equatorial part of the Indian Ocean (monsoon cell).
• It finally approaches the west coast of India as a return current and causes rainfall in India and adjoining
countries.
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Indian Monsoons – Role of Tibet and STJ
• The progress of the southwest monsoon towards India is greatly aided by the onset of Somali jet.
• It strengthens permanent high near Madagascar and also helps to drive S-W monsoons towards In-
dia at a greater pace and intensity (it intensifies the monsoon cell).
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• The current in the Arabian Sea associated with the Somali Jet is called as Findlater Current. Its
direction is influenced by the monsoon winds. It reverses its direction with the monsoon winds.
• Findlater Current in s-w monsoon season creates a zone of coastal upwelling near the horn of Africa
(good for fishing).
• It doesn’t have a significant impact on Indian Monsoons because the zone of upwelling is very small
unlike in the case of Indian Ocean Dipole.
• The Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) is defined by the difference in sea surface temperature between two areas
(or poles, hence a dipole) – a western pole in the Arabian Sea (western Indian Ocean) and an eastern
pole in the eastern Indian Ocean south of Indonesia.
• IOD develops in the equatorial region of Indian Ocean from April to May peaking in October.
• Positive IOD is good for Indian Monsoons as more evaporation occurs in warm water.
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Indian Ocean Dipole
2. Indian Climate
• The north Indian plains are under the influence of hot, dry wind called ‘loo’ blowing from the Thar, Baloch
and Iranian Deserts.
• The climate in most of the regions is characterized by distinct wet and dry seasons.
• Some places like Thar desert, Ladakh have no wet season.
• Mawsynram and Cherrapunji in Meghalaya receive around 1,100 cm of annual rainfall while at Jaisalmer
the annual rainfall rarely exceeds 12 cm.
Temperature
• Highest diurnal temperature ranges occur in the Thar desert, and the highest annual temperature
ranges are recorded in the Himalayan regions.
• Both diurnal and mean annual temperature ranges are least in coastal regions.
Latitudinal location
Himalayas
• During winter, Himalayas protect India from cold and dry air masses of Central Asia.
• During monsoon months these mountain ranges act as an effective physical barrier for rain-bearing
south-west monsoon winds (Orographic Rainfall).
• The Himalayas divide the Bay of Bengal branch of monsoon winds into two branches – one branch
flowing along the plain regions towards north-west India and the other towards South-East Asia.
Why rainfall decreases from east to west in plains region (Indus-Ganga Plains)?
• As the monsoon winds move from east to west, the moisture levels decrease due to successive rainfall at
each low-pressure region.
Then how come Haryana and Punjab not deserts like Rajasthan?
• They receive rainfall due to Western Disturbances in winter. (In summer the rainfall is very low.)
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Physiography
• Places on the windward side of an orographic barrier receive a great amount of rainfall whereas those
on the leeward side remain arid to semi-arid due to rain-shadow effect.
Why no significant rainfall in Gujarat and Rajasthan? Explain the formation of Thar Desert?
• Monsoons winds flowing in Rajasthan and Gujarat are not obstructed by any orographic barrier.
• Monsoon winds blow almost parallel to Aravallis, and also, they are not of imposing height to cause oro-
graphic effect except for some places like Mount Abu.
• No convection cell or vertical wind movements arise in Rajasthan and Gujarat.
• Sub-tropical high-pressure belt.
• Mawsynram and Cherrapunji (both the places in Khasi Hills, Meghalaya) are the wettest places on
earth with mean annual rainfall over 1100 cm.
• Copious rainfall in these places is due to the funnelling effect followed by orographic upliftment
(Khasi Hills).
• Funnelling effect: clouds are channelled into a narrow region between mountains and hence the cloud den-
sity is extraordinary.
Funnelling Effect
Monsoon Winds
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1. Sudden onset (sudden burst)
2. Gradual progress
3. Gradual retreat
4. Seasonal reversal of winds
El Nino
La Nina
ENSO
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Mean Temperature in January
• High air pressure prevails over large parts of north-west India due to STJ.
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Prevailing winds and Cyclones paths in January
• They cause light rain in the Indus-Ganga plains and snowfall in the Himalayan belt.
• After the passage of the disturbance, widespread fog and cold waves lowering the minimum temperature
by 5° to 10°C below normal are experienced.
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• The retreating winter monsoons pick up some moisture while crossing the Bay of Bengal and cause
winter rainfall in Tamil Nadu, south Andhra Pradesh, south-east Karnataka and south-east Kerala
(Usually in the first weeks of November).
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Precipitation in Winter Season
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Precipitation in NE Monsoon Season
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Summer Season in India
• March to June.
• It is sometimes referred to as the pre-monsoon period.
• The southern parts of the country are distinctly warmer in March and April whereas, in June, north
India has higher temperatures.
• The highest temperatures recorded are 50.5 °C at Alwar on 10th May 1956 and 50.6 °C at Ganganagar on
14th June 1935.
• The highest temperatures are recorded just before the onset of the southwest monsoons (late May).
• The atmospheric pressure is low all over the country due to high temperature.
• But strong dynamically induced divergence over north-west India prevents the onset of south-west
monsoons.
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Prevailing winds and Cyclones paths in April
Loo
Andhis
• The strong dust storms resulting from the convective phenomena are locally known as andhis (blinding
storms). They move like a solid wall of dust and sand.
• Such dust storms are common in Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab, Jammu region, etc.
• The strong convectional movements related to the westerly jet stream lead to thunderstorms in the eastern
and north-eastern part of the country.
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Norwesters and Thunderstorms in Summer Season
• In West Bengal and the adjoining areas of Jharkhand, Odisha and Assam, the direction of squalls is mainly
from the northwest, and they are called norwesters.
• The rainfall brought by the norwesters is known as the spring storm showers.
• Hailstones sometimes accompany showers and cause heavy damage to standing crops.
• However, they are, sometimes, useful for tea, jute and rice cultivation.
• In Assam, these storms are known as Tea Showers and Barodoli Chheerha.
• The period of maximum occurrence of these storms is the month of Vaisakh (mid-March to mid-April), and
hence, they are locally known as Kalabaisakhis.
• In Karnataka, they are called cherry blossoms or blossom showers due to their effect on the coffee plan-
tations.
• Such showers are called mango showers in Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh because they are very
beneficial to mango crop.
• Most of the storms of this season initially move west or north-west, but later they recurve northeast and
strike Bangladesh and the Arakan Coast of Myanmar.
• Very few hit the Indian coast while some dissipate over the sea itself.
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Precipitation in Summer (March to May)
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Rainy Season – South West Monsoon Season
• Sudden onset of South West Monsoons leads to a significant fall in temperature (3° to 6 °C).
• There is a rise in temperature whenever there is a break in the monsoons.
• Normal date of the arrival of the monsoon is 20th May in Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
• The advance of the monsoon is much faster in the Bay of Bengal than in the Arabian Sea.
127
Precipitation in South West monsoon Season
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• The normal date of onset of the southwest monsoon over Kerala, i.e. the first place of entry in the main-
land of India is 1st June.
South West Monsoon – Arabian Sea branch and Bay of Bengal branch
• Monsoon winds beyond south Kerala progress in the form of two branches viz. the Arabian Sea branch
and the Bay of Bengal branch.
South West Monsoon – Arabian Sea branch and Bay of Bengal branch
• On reaching the foothills of the Himalayas, the Bay branch is deflected westward by the Himalayan bar-
rier, and it advances up the Gangetic plain.
• The two branches merge with each other mostly around Delhi to form a single current.
• Both the branches reach Delhi more or less at the same time.
• Arabian Sea branch of the monsoon is much powerful than the Bay of Bengal branch for reasons:
1. The Arabian Sea is larger than the Bay of Bengal, and
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2. the entire Arabian Sea current advances towards India, whereas only a part of the Bay of Bengal
current, enters India, the remainder proceeding to Myanmar, Thailand and Malaysia.
• Some orographic effect is occurring on the south-eastern edge of the Aravalli Range. Mount Abu
gets about 170 cm rainfall while the surrounding plains have only 60 to 80 cm rainfall.
The Bay of Bengal Branch of the southwest monsoon is divided into two distinct streams.
• The first stream crosses the Ganga-Brahmaputra delta and reaches Meghalaya.
• Here that the orographic effect results in intense rainfall.
• Cherrapunji receives an annual rainfall of 1,102 cm, a major portion of which occurs from June to August.
• Mawsynram (present champion) located at 1,329 m above sea level just 16 km to the west of Cherrapun-
ji (X champion) records higher annual rainfall of 1,221 cm.
• Both the stations are located on the southern slopes of the Khasi hills.
• The second stream of the Bay of Bengal branch moves along Himalayan foothills.
• The rainfall by this stream is characterized by a steady decline as we move from east to west up the plain.
• The Tamil Nadu coast remains relatively dry during the south-west monsoon period because of
1. rain shadow effect of the Arabian Sea current and
2. Bay of Bengal current which flows parallel to the coast.
• During July and August, there are certain periods when the monsoons become weak.
• Rainfall practically ceases over the country outside the Himalayan belt and southeast peninsula.
• This is known as a break in the monsoon.
• The breaks are believed to be brought about by the northward shifting of the monsoon trough (minimum
low-pressure cells in ITCZ) to the foothills of Himalayas.
• This leads to a sharp decrease in rainfall over most parts of the country but increases along the Hima-
layas and parts of Northeast India and the Southern Peninsula.
• Breaks are likely to occur during the second week of August and last for a week.
• The breaks can also occur due to tropical cyclones which originate in the Bay of Bengal.
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131
Advance and Withdrawal Dates of South West Monsoons
• Starts with the beginning of the withdrawal of southwest monsoon (middle of September – November).
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• Most severe and devastating tropical cyclones originate in the Indian seas especially in the Bay of Ben-
gal.
• More cyclones are born in October and then in November, and more cyclones originate in the Bay of
Bengal than in the Arabian Sea.
• October-November is the main rainy season in Tamil Nadu and adjoining areas of Andhra Pradesh.
• The retreating monsoons absorb moisture while passing over the Bay of Bengal and cause this rainfall.
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Average Annual Rainfall (South West Monsoons + Retreating Monsoons)
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Isohyet (the line joining places of equal rainfall) [Compare this with isotherm (temperature), isobar
(pressure)]
• These are desert and semi-desert areas receiving less than 50 cm of annual rainfall.
• They include large areas of western Rajasthan, Kutch and most of Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir.
• Stamp used 18 °C isotherm of mean monthly temperature for January to divide the country into two broad
climatic regions, viz., temperate or continental zone in the north and tropical zone in the south.
Tropical India
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Temperate or Continental India
Tropical India
Amw: Monsoon type with Western coastal region, south of Mumbai over 300 cm
short dry winter season
As: Monsoon type with dry Coromandel coast: Coastal Tamil Nadu and adjoining ar- 75-100 cm
season in high sun period eas of Andhra Pradesh Wet winters
Dry summers
Aw: Tropical Savanah type Most parts of the peninsular plateau barring Coromandel 75 cm
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and Malabar coastal strips
BShw: Semi-arid Steppe type Some rain shadow areas of Western Ghats, large part of 12-25 cm
Rajasthan and contiguous areas of Haryana and Gujarat
Cwg: Monsoon type with dry Most parts of the Ganga Plain, eastern Rajasthan, Assam 100-200 cm
winters and in Malwa Plateau
Dfc: Cold, Humid winters Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh and parts of Assam ~200 cm
type with shorter summer
E: Polar Type Higher areas of Jammu & Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh Precipitation oc-
in which the temperature of the warmest month varies curs in the form
from 0° to 10°C of snow
For more information on Koppen’s Scheme of Classification refer to Climatology > Climatic Regions.
• As the temperature falls with altitude in the Himalayan region the vegetal cover changes with altitude from
tropical to sub-tropical, temperate and finally alpine (vertical zonation of vegetaton).
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3. Tropical Moist Deciduous
4. Littoral and Swamp
E. Alpine Forests
1. Sub-Alpine
2. Moist Alpine scrub
3. Dry Alpine scrub
Tropical Semi-Evergreen 4
Rest below 4 %
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Classification of Natural Vegetation of India
Climatic Conditions
Characteristics
• Evergreen: The trees of these forests do not shed their leaves together.
• Vegetation is mesophytic: Plants adapted to neither too dry nor too wet type climate or soil.
Hydrophytic plants: plants like water lily or pondweed that grow in saturated soil
Xerophytic plants: plants like cactus that grow in extremely dry soil.
Mesophytic plants: ordinary plants that exist between the two extremes.
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• Lofty, Thick Canopy, Less undergrowth.
Distribution
• The western side of the Western Ghats (500 to 1370 metres above sea level).
• Some regions in the Purvanchal hills.
• In the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
Timber
• Hardwood: The timber of these forests is fine-grained, hard and durable but is hard to exploit.
• The important species of these forests are mahogany, mesua, white cedar, jamun, canes, bamboo etc.
• They are transitional forests between tropical wet evergreen forests and tropical deciduous forests.
Climatic Conditions
Distribution
• Western coast, Assam, Lower slopes of the Eastern Himalayas, Odisha and Andamans.
Characteristics
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Tress with buttressed trunks and epiphytes
• The important species are laurel, rosewood, mesua, thorny bamboo – Western Ghats; white cedar, Indi-
an chestnut, champa, mango, etc. – Himalayan region.
Timber
• Hardwood: Similar to that in tropical evergreen forests except that these forests are less dense with more
pure stands (timber industry here is better than in evergreen forests).
Climatic Conditions
Characteristics
• The trees drop their leaves during the spring and early summer.
• The general appearance is bare in extreme summers (April-May).
• Tropical moist deciduous forests present irregular top storey (25 to 60 m).
• Heavily buttressed trees and fairly complete undergrowth.
Distribution
• The belt running along the Western Ghats surrounding the belt of evergreen forests.
• A strip along the Shiwalik range including terai and bhabar from 77° E to 88° E.
• Manipur and Mizoram.
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• Hills of eastern Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh.
• Chota Nagpur Plateau.
• Most of Odisha.
• Parts of West Bengal and
• Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
Timber
• They can survive and grow both in fresh as well as brackish water (0.5 to 35 ppt).
• Occur in and around the deltas, estuaries and creeks prone to tidal influences (delta or tidal forests).
• Swamp forests are confined to the deltas of the Ganga, the Mahanadi, the Godavari (Coringa Wildlife
Sanctuary), the Krishna and the Cauvery.
• The most pronounced and the densest is the Sundarbans in the Ganga delta where the predominant spe-
cies is Sundri (Heriteera).
Timber
• It provides hard and durable timber which is used for construction, building purposes and making boats.
• The important species found in these forests are sundri, agar, rhizophora, etc.
Distribution
Climatic Conditions
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Characteristics
Casuarina plantation
Distribution
• Casuarina is the most popular farm forestry in the states of Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal,
Odisha, Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Karnataka.
Casuarina plantation
• It is a suitable species for wasteland development because of its adaptability to a wide range of habitats,
fast growth, salt tolerant, drought resistant, ability to reclaim land and stabilise sand dunes.
Climatic Conditions
Characteristics
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• These are similar to moist deciduous forests and shed their leaves in dry season.
• They represent a transitional type – moist deciduous on the wetter side and thorn forests on the drier side.
• Undergrowth: Enough light reaches the ground to permit the growth of grass and climbers.
Distribution
• They occur in an irregular wide strip running from the foot of the Himalayas to Kanyakumari except in Raja-
sthan, Western Ghats and West Bengal.
• The important species are teak, axlewood, rosewood, common bamboo, red sanders, laurel, etc.
Climatic Conditions
Characteristics
Distribution
• Rajasthan, south-western Punjab, western Haryana, Kutch and neighbouring parts of Saurashtra.
• Here they degenerate into desert type in the Thar desert.
• Such forests also grow on the leeside of the Western Ghats covering large areas of Maharashtra (Vidarbha),
Karnataka (Hyderabad-Karnataka), Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.
• The important species are neem, babul, cacti, etc.
Climatic conditions
Distribution
• Eastern Himalayas to the east of 88°E longitude at altitudes varying from 1000 to 2000 m.
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Characteristics
Distribution
• Western Himalayas between 73°E and 88°E longitudes at elevations between 1000 to 2000 metres above
sea level.
• Some hilly regions of Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Naga Hills and Khasi Hills.
Timber
• Chir or Chil is the most dominant tree which forms pure stands.
• It provides valuable timber for furniture, boxes and buildings.
Distribution
• Found in the Bhabar, the Shiwaliks and the western Himalayas up to about 1000 metres above sea level.
Climatic Conditions
Characteristics
• Low scrub forest with small evergreen stunted trees and shrubs.
• Olive, acacia modesta and pistacia are the most predominant species.
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Montane Wet Temperate Forests
Climatic Conditions
Distribution
• Higher hills of Tamil Nadu and Kerala, in the Eastern Himalayan region.
Characteristics
Climatic Conditions
Distribution
• Occurs in the temperate zone of the Himalayas between 1500 and 3300 metres.
• Cover the entire length of this mountain range in Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Darjeeling and
Sikkim.
Characteristics
Timber
• It provides fine wood which is of much use for construction, timber and railway sleepers.
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Himalayan Dry Temperate Forests
Climatic Conditions
Characteristics
• Coniferous forests with xerophytic shrubs in which deodar, oak, ash, olive, etc are the main trees.
Distribution
• Such forests are found in the inner dry ranges of the Himalayas where south-west monsoon is very feeble.
• Such areas are in Ladakh, Lahul, Chamba, Kinnaur, Garhwal and Sikkim.
E. Alpine Forests
4. Biogeography – Soils
• The uppermost horizon is generally dark in colour as it is rich in humus and minerals.
• The humus makes the soil fertile and provides nutrients to growing plants.
• This layer is generally soft, porous and can retain more water. It is called the topsoil or the A-horizon.
• The next layer has a lesser amount of humus but more of minerals.
• This layer is generally harder and more compact and is called the B-horizon or the middle layer.
• The third layer is the C-horizon, which is made up of small lumps of rocks with cracks.
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Soil Profile (Soil Horizon)
O Horizon
E horizon
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• "E" stands for an eluviated layer.
• It is the horizon that has been significantly leached of clay, iron, and aluminium oxides, which leaves a con-
centration of resistant minerals, such as quartz, in the sand and silt sizes.
• These are present only in older, well-developed soils, and generally, occur between the A and B horizons.
B Horizon or Subsoil
• Weathered parent material accumulates in this layer, i.e. the parent material in sedimentary deposits.
• This layer may accumulate more soluble compounds (inorganic material).
R Horizon or Bedrock
• Unlike the above layers, R horizons largely comprise continuous masses of hard rock.
Parent Material
• The rocks from which soils are formed are called parent materials.
• In most of the cases, the parent material determines the colouration, mineral composition and texture
of the soil.
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• In Indian Conditions, parent material is generally categorized into:
1. Ancient crystalline and metamorphic rocks
2. Cuddapah and Vindhyan rocks
3. Gondwana rocks
4. Deccan basalts
5. Tertiary and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks of extra peninsular India {Rock System}
• They are the Oldest rocks (pre-Cambrian era) (formed due to solidification of molten magma about 4 bil-
lion years ago).
• They form the ‘Basement Complex’ of peninsular India.
• They are basically granites, gneisses and schists.
• These rocks are rich in ferromagnetic materials and give rise to red soils on weathering.
• The red colour of these soils is due to the presence of iron oxide.
Gondwana rocks
• These rocks are also sedimentary in nature, and they are much younger.
• On weathering, they give rise to comparatively less mature soils.
• The soil is more or less of uniform character but of low fertility.
Deccan basalts
• A volcanic outburst over a vast area of Peninsular India gave rise to Deccan Traps.
• Basalts are rich in titanium, magnetite, aluminium and magnesium.
• Consequently, the weathering of these rocks has given rise to soils of darker colour.
• The soil is fertile with high moisture holding capacity and is popularly known as regur or black cotton
soil.
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Tertiary and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks
• Rocks of extra peninsular (plains and Himalayas) India have given rise to soils with high porosity.
• These soils are generally immature recent and sub recent rocks, result in alluvial soils on weathering.
• Alluvial fertile soils consist of fine silts and clay. These soils have little relation with the original rocks.
• On the other hand, the soils of the peninsular plateau are generally coarse-grained and are closely re-
lated to the parent rocks. The peninsular soils are generally less fertile.
Climate
• The crystalline granites produce laterite (reddish clayey soils) soil in relatively moist parts of the
monsoonal region and non-laterite soil in drier areas.
• Hot summer and low rainfall develop black soil as is found in some parts of Tamil Nadu irrespective
of the parent rock.
• In Rajasthan, both granite and sandstone give birth to sandy soil under arid climate.
• In arid and semi-arid regions, evaporation always exceeds precipitation. There is little vegetation, and the
soils badly lack humus content. Hence the soils are invariably of light colour.
• In Rajasthan and the adjoining arid and semi-arid regions, an excess of evaporation makes soils lime ac-
cumulating.
• Hence the soil is pedocal in nature (It is a class of soil which forms in semiarid and arid regions. It is rich in
calcium carbonate and has low soil organic matter).
• In cold climates of the Himalayan region, the process of vegetation decay is very slow, and the soils are
acidic in nature.
In areas of heavy rainfall and high temperature, the soils are red or lateritic. Why?
• Torrential rainfall during the rainy season washes the upper soil and leaches the materials into the deeper
horizon.
• During the dry summer season, the evaporation exceeds precipitation, and through capillary action, iron
and aluminium oxides are transported to the surface making the soil red.
• In areas of alternate wet and dry climate, the leached material which goes deep down in the horizon is
brought up, and the blazing sun bakes the topsoil so hard that it resembles a brick.
• Therefore, this soil is called lateritic which means brick.
Natural Vegetation
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• The densely forested areas contain some of the best soils in India.
• The soils of Peninsular India are formed by the decomposition of rocks in-situ.
• Soils of Peninsular India are are known as sedentary soils.
• The soils of the Extra-Peninsula (Indo-Gangetic-Brahmaputra plains) are formed due to the deposi-
tional work of rivers and wind. They are very deep. They are often referred to as transported or azonal
soils.
• Major soil groups:
(1) Alluvial soils
(2) Black soils
(3) Red soils
(4) Laterite and Lateritic soils
(5) Forest and Mountain soils
(6) Arid and Desert soils
(7) Saline and Alkaline soils
(8) Peaty and Marshy soils
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Major Soil Groups of India
Alluvial Soils
• Alluvial soils are formed mainly due to silt deposited by Indo-Gangetic-Brahmaputra rivers (transport-
ed or azonal soils).
• They are the largest soil group covering about 15 lakh sq km or about 45.6 per cent of the total area.
• They are immature and have weak profiles due to their recent origin.
• Most of the soil is loamy. Sandy and clayey soils are not uncommon.
• Kankar (calcareous concretions) beds are present in some regions along the river terraces.
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• The soil is porous because of its loamy (equal proportion of sand and clay) nature.
• Porosity and texture provide good drainage and other conditions favourable for agriculture.
• These soils are constantly replenished by the recurrent floods.
• They occur all along the Indo-Gangetic-Brahmaputra plains except in few places where the top layer is
covered by desert sand.
• They also occur in deltas of the Mahanadi, the Godavari, the Krishna and the Cauvery, where they are called
deltaic alluvium (coastal alluvium).
• Some alluvial soils are found in the Narmada, Tapti valleys and Northern parts of Gujarat.
• They are best suited to irrigation and respond well to the canal and well/tube-well irrigation.
• They yield splendid crops of rice, wheat, sugarcane, tobacco, cotton, jute, maize, oilseeds, etc.
• Geologically, the alluvium of the Great plain of India is divided into newer or younger khadar and older
bhangar soils.
Black Soils
• The parent material for most of the black soil are the volcanic rocks that were formed in the Deccan Plateau
(Deccan and the Rajmahal trap).
• It I a soil group typical to the dry and hot regions of the Peninsula.
• A typical black soil is highly argillaceous (containing clay) with a large clay factor, 62 per cent or more.
• The black soil is highly retentive of moisture.
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• It swells greatly on accumulating moisture.
• In summer, the moisture evaporates the soil shrinks and is seamed with broad and deep cracks.
• The lower layers can still retain moisture. The cracks permit oxygenation of the soil to sufficient depths.
• The black colour is due to the presence of a small proportion of titaniferous magnetite or iron and black
constituents of the parent rock.
• In Tamil Nadu and parts of Andhra Pradesh, the black colour is derived from crystalline schists and basic
gneisses.
• Spread over 5.46 lakh sq km (16.6 per cent of the total area) across Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, parts
of Karnataka, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu.
• These soils are best suited for cotton crop. Hence these soils are called as regur and black cotton soils.
• Other major crops grown on the black soils include wheat, jowar, linseed, virginia tobacco, castor, sunflower
and millets.
• Rice and sugarcane are equally important where irrigation facilities are available.
Red Soils
• Red soils along with its minor groups form one of the largest soil group of India.
• The main parent rocks are crystalline and metamorphic rocks like acid granites, gneisses and quartzites.
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• The texture of these soils can vary from sand to clay, the majority being loams.
• On the uplands, the red soils are poor, gravelly, and porous. But in the lower areas, they are rich, deep dark
and fertile.
• They are acidic mainly due to the nature of the parent rocks. The alkali content is fair.
• They are poor in lime, magnesia, phosphates, nitrogen and humus.
• They are fairly rich in potash and potassium.
• The red soils are mostly loamy and hence cannot retain water like the black soils.
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• They are very poor in lime, magnesia, potash and nitrogen.
• Sometimes, the phosphate content may be high in the form of iron phosphate.
• In wetter places, there may be higher content of humus.
• These soils occupy about 2.85 lakh sq km or 8.67% of the total land area of India.
• They are mainly heterogeneous soils found on the hill slopes covered by forests.
• They differ greatly even if they occur in close proximity to one another.
• In the Himalayan region, such soils are mainly found in valleys, less steep and north facing slopes.
• Forest soils occur in Western and Eastern Ghats also.
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• They are suitable for plantations of tea, coffee, spices and tropical fruits in the peninsular forest region.
• Wheat, maize, barley and temperate fruits are grown in the Himalayan forest region.
• The desert soils consist of aeolian sand (90 to 95 per cent) and clay (5 to 10 per cent).
• They cover a total area of 1.42 lakh sq km (4.32%).
• The presence of sand inhibits soil growth.
• Desertification of neighbouring soils is common due to the intrusion of aeolian sand (wind action).
• Phosphates and nitrates make these soils fertile wherever moisture is available.
• In Saline and Alkaline Soils, the topsoil is impregnated (soak or saturate with a substance) with saline and
alkaline efflorescences (become covered with salt particles).
• Undecomposed rock fragments, on weathering, give rise to sodium, magnesium and calcium salts and
sulphurous acid.
• In regions with the low water table, the salts percolate into subsoil and in regions with good drainage,
the salts are wasted away by flowing water.
• But in places where the drainage system is poor, the water with high salt concentration becomes stagnant
and deposits all the salts in the topsoil once the water evaporates.
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• In regions with the high sub-soil water table, injurious salts are transferred from below by the capillary
action as a result of evaporation in the dry season.
Capillary action
• Capillary action is the ability of a liquid to flow in narrow spaces without the assistance of, and in op-
position to, external forces like gravity.
• The force behind capillary action is surface tension.
Surface tension
• Surface tension is the elastic tendency of liquids (a membrane-like surface) that makes them acquire the
least surface area possible.
• Surface tension causes insects (e.g. water striders), usually denser than water, to float and stride on the wa-
ter surface.
• Surface tension offers the necessary buoyant force (buoyancy) required for an object to float in water (Ships
float because of difference in density as well as surface tension).
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• All this is due to surface tension.
• These soils are found in canal irrigated areas and areas of a high sub-soil water table.
• Parts of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Punjab (side effects of im-
proper or excess irrigation), Rajasthan and Maharashtra have this kind of soils.
• These are soils with a large amount of organic matter and a considerable amount of soluble salts.
• The most humid regions have this type of soil.
• They are black, heavy and highly acidic.
• Most of the peaty soils are under water during the rainy season but as soon the rains cease; they are put
under paddy cultivation.
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