geography - study glows · 2019. 3. 8. · coastal plains •eastern coastal plains •western...
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GEOGRAPHY
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
INDIAN GEOGRAPHY
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
INDIAN GEOGRAPHY
• Indian Geography is divided into two parts:
1. Political Geography
2. Physical Geography
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
• The great mountain of North• Northern Plain• Peninsular Plateau• Coastal Plains• Thar Desert• Islands
GREAT MOUNTAINS
• HIMALAYAS
• OUTER HIMALAYAS OR SHIWALIK RANGE
• LESSER HIMALAYAS
• GREAT HIMALAYAS
2. NORTHERN PLAINS
• INDO GANGETIC PLAINS
• THREE REGIONS ARE PUNJAB,GANGA AND BRAHMAPUTRA.
• RIVERS
• REGIONS
3. PENINSULAR PLATEAU
• THE DECCAN
• CENTRAL HIGHLAND
4. COASTAL PLAINS
• EASTERN COASTAL PLAINS
• WESTERN COASTAL PLAINS
5. DESERT
• THAR
• EXTENSIONS
• AREA
6. ISLAND
• ANDAMAN NICOBAR
• LAKSHWADEEP
• SRAHARIKOTA
• MAJULI
• SELSETTE
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INDIAN GEOGRAPHY
CHAPTER 1ORIGIN OF HIMALAYAS
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
PANGEA
PANGEA
CONTINENTAL DRIFT
ORIGIN• The Himalayan mountain range and
Tibetan plateau have formed as a result of the collision between the Indian Plate and Eurasian Plate which began 50 million ye 225 million years ago (Ma) India was a large island situated off the Australian coast and separated from Asia by the Tethys Ocean.
• The supercontinent Pangea began to break up 200 Ma and India started a northward drift towards Asia.
• Most of the thick sediments on the Indian margin of the ocean were scraped off and accreted onto the Eurasian continent.
ORIGIN
• These scraped-off sediments are what now form the Himalayan mountain range.
• The Eurasian plate was partly crumpled and buckled up above the Indian plate but due to their low density/high buoyancy neither continental plate could be subducted.
• This caused the continental crust to thicken due to folding and faulting by compressional forces pushing up the Himalaya and the Tibetan Plateau.
ORIGIN
• The Himalayas are still rising by more than 1 cm per year as India continues to move northwards into Asia, which explains the occurrence of shallow focus earthquakes in the region today.
• However the forces of weathering and erosion are lowering the Himalayas at about the same rate. The Himalayas and Tibetan plateau trend east-west and extend for 2,900 km, reaching the maximum elevation of 8,848 metres (Mount Everest – the highest point on Earth),
GEOGRAPHY
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
INDIAN GEOGRAPHY
CHAPTER 2 HIMALAYAS
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
SOME FACTS
• Himalayas, Nepali Himalaya, great mountain system of Asia forming a barrier between the Plateau of Tibet to the north and the alluvial plains of the Indian subcontinent to the south.
• The Himalayas include the highest mountains in the world, with more than 110 peaks rising to elevations of 24,000 feet (7,300 metres) or more above sea level.
SOME FACTS
• The Himalayas themselves stretch uninterruptedly for about 1,550 miles (2,500 km) from west to east between Nanga Parbat , in the Pakistani-administered portion of the Kashmir region, and Namcha Barwa Peak in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China.
• Between those western and eastern extremities lie the two Himalayan countries of Nepal and Bhutan.
• The width of the Himalayas from south to north varies between 125 and 250 miles (200 and 400 km). Their total area amounts to about 230,000 square miles (595,000 square km).
ORIGIN
DIVISIONS
1. Trans himalays or tethys himalaya
2. Lesser himalays
3. Greater himalayas
4. Shiwaliks or outer himalayas
LONGITUDINAL DIVISIONS
1. KASHMIR HIMALAYS
2. HIMACHAL HIMALAYS
3. KUMAUN HIMALAYAS
4. SIKKIM HIMALAYS
5. ARUNACHAL HIMALAYAS
6. PURVACHAL HIMALAYAS
HIMALAYA
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INDIAN GEOGRAPHY
CHAPTER 3 TRANS HIMALAYA OR TEHTHYS
HIMALAYA
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
DIVISIONS
1. Trans himalays or tethys himalaya
2. Lesser himalays
3. Greater himalayas
4. Shiwaliks or outer himalayas
TRANS HIMALAYA
• The Himalayan ranges immediately north of the Great Himalayan range.Also called the Tibetan Himalaya because most of it lies in Tibet.Consists of four ranges:-
• Karakoram• Ladakh, • Zaskar, • Kailas
DIVISIONS
KARAKORAM RANGE
• The part of the complex of ranges including the • Pamir Mountains, • Hindu Kush • Himalayan Mountains.
• K2, the second highest peak in the world at 8,611 m (28,251 ft), Gasherbrum I, Broad Peak and Gasherbrum II.
• The range is about 500 km (311 mi) in length, and is the most heavily glaciated part of the world outside the polar regions.
LADAKH RANGE
• The Ladakh Range is regarded as a southern extension of the Karakoram Range, which runs for 230 miles (370 km) from the confluence of the Indus and Shyok rivers in Baltistan to the Tibetan border of Ladakh in the southeast.
• The southern extension of the Ladakh Range is called the Kailash Range, especially in Tibet.
• The Ladakh Range has an average height of about 6,000 metres and has no major peaks.
• The main mountain passes are Chorbat (5,090 metres), Digar La (5,400 metres), Khardung La (5,602 metres), Chang La (5,599 metres) and Tsaka La (4,724 metres).
RIVER
ZASKAR RANGE
• The Nanga Parbat (8126 mt) bring to a head or to the highest point in the north-west but the adjoining Deosai Mountain may also be included in it. Ladakh range is in the north of the Zaskar range which runs parallel to it.
• This range is having the average elevation of the 5,800 mt. above sea level and it is about 300 km long, only few peaks of this range attains height of over 6000 mt.
KAILAS RANGE
• Kailas Range, Chinese Gangdisi Shan or Kang-ti-ssu Shan, Tibetan Gang Tise, also called Gangdisê Range, one of the highest and most rugged parts of the Himalayas, located in the southwestern part of the Tibet Autonomous Region, southwestern China.
• Mount Kailas is an important holy site, both to the Hindus, who identify it with the paradise of Shiva(one of the three supreme gods of Hinduism), and to the Tibetan Buddhists, who identify it as Mount Sumeru, cosmic centre of the universe. River Indus originates from the northern slopes of the Kailas range
INDIAN GEOGRAPHY
CHAPTER 4GREATER HIMALAYAS
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
DIVISIONS
1. Lesser himalays
2. Greater himalayas
3. Shiwaliks or outer himalayas
GREAT HIMALAYA
• Great Himalayas, also called Higher Himalayas or Great Himalaya Range, highest and northernmost section of the Himalayan mountain ranges.
• It extends southeastward across northern Pakistan, northern India, and Nepal before trending eastward across Sikkim state (India) and Bhutan and finally turning northeastward across northern Arunachal Pradesh state (India); throughout nearly all of its length it adjoins to the north the southern Tibet Autonomous Region of China.
TRANS HIMALAYA
• The range’s total length is some 1,400 miles (2,300 km), and it has an average elevation of more than 20,000 feet (6,100 metres).
• The Great Himalayas contain many of the world’s tallest peaks, including (from west to east) Nanga Parbat, Annapurna, Mount Everest, and Kanchenjunga
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CHAPTER 5LESSER HIMALAYAS OR HIMACHAL
By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI
B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics)
WEBSITE :STUDYGLOWS.COM
DIVISIONS
1. Greater himalayas
2. Lesser himalays
3.Shiwaliks or outer himalayas
DIVISIONS
LESSER HIMALAYA
• In between the Shiwaliks in the south and the Greater Himalayas in the north.Runs almost parallel called the Himachal or Lower Himalaya.Lower Himalayan ranges are 60-80 km wide and about 2400 km in length.
• 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 RangeThe Middle Himalayan ranges are more friendly to human contact.
RANGES
RANGES REGION
The Pir Panjal RangeJammu and Kashmir (They are to the south of Kashmir Valley)
The Dhaola Dhar Range Himachal Pradesh
The Mussoorie Range and The Nag Tiba Range
Uttarakhand
Mahabharat Lekh Nepal
PIR PANJAL
• The Pir Panjal range in Kashmir is the longest and the most important range.It extends from the Jhelum river to the upper Beas river for over 300 km.
• The Banihal Pass is used by the Jammu-Srinagar highway and Jammu-Baramula railway.
• Southeast of the Ravi, the Pir Panjal continues as Dhaola Dhar range, passing through Dalhousie, Dharmshala, and Shimla.
GRASSLANDS
• Between the Pir Panjal and the Zaskar Range of the main Himalayas, lies the valley of Kashmir.
• When snow melts we see great soft grasslands called Sonemarg,Gulmarg in kashmir and Boyal,Bugyal in Uttarakhand.
• Hill stations like Shimla,Manali,Dalhousie in Himachal pradesh and In Uttarakhand we have Mussorie,Nainital,Ranikhet,Windsor.
PIR PANJAL
• Between lesser himalaya and greater himalaya we have Jammu and Kashmir valley,kullu-kangra valley in Himachal pradesh,Kathmandu valley in Nepal
• Srinagar has dal lake and woolar lake
BISHNOI
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