Guide On Travel
India can be divided into three main regions: the
Himalayas, the Gangetic Plain, and peninsular India.
The Himalayan mountain system is 160 to 320 km (100
to 200 mi) wide and extends 2,400 km (1,500 mi)
along the northern and eastern borders of India. It
includes the mountains surrounding the Vale of
Kashmīr in the Karakoram Range, and the central and
eastern Himalayas. Ancient geological forces molded
the Himalayas as the Indian plate of the Earth’s
crust burrowed under the Eurasian landmass,
creating an uplift that continues to push this
northernmost boundary of India ever higher. The
Himalayan Range is the highest mountain system in
the world. Among its towering summits, wholly or
partly within India or within territory claimed by
India and administered by Pakistan, are K2 (8,611
m/28,251 ft) and Kānchenjunga (8,598 m/28,209 ft),
which are the second and third highest peaks in the
world, after Mount Everest. Other prominent Indian
peaks include Nanga Parbat (8,125 m/26,657 ft),
Nanda Devi (7,817 m/25,646 ft), Rakaposhi (7,788
m/25,551 ft), and Kāmet peak (7,756 m/25,446 ft).
The Himalayas region, including the foothills, is
sparsely settled. Agriculture and animal herding
are the main economic activities.
South and parallel to the Himalayas lies the
Gangetic Plain, a belt of flat, alluvial lowlands
280 to 400 km (175 to 250 mi) wide. This area
includes some of the most agriculturally productive
land in India. The Indian portion of the broad
Gangetic Plain encompasses several river systems,
and stretches from Punjab state in the west,
through the Gangetic Plain, to the Assam Valley in
the east. Marking the western end of the Gangetic
Plain are the Indus River and its tributaries,
including the Sutlej and Chenāb rivers, which flow
through Punjab in India’s northwest corner. The
Gangetic Plain is formed by the Ganges River and
its tributaries, which drain the southern slopes of
the Himalayas. Assam Valley is separated from the
Gangetic Plain by a narrow corridor of land near
the city of Dārjiling (Darjeeling). The valley is
watered by the Brahmaputra River, which rises in
Tibet and crosses into India at its northeast
corner, then flows north of the Khāsi Hills into
Bangladesh. The Thar Desert, a huge dry, sandy
region extending into Pakistan, lies at the
southwestern end of the Gangetic Plain.
South of the plains region lies peninsular India.
The northern peninsula features a series of
mountain ranges and plateaus. The Arāvalli Range
runs in a north-south direction on the eastern edge
of the Thar Desert, and low hills cut by valleys
lie along the border between the states of Uttar
Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh in central India. The
Narmada River flows southwest between the Vindhya
Range and an associated plateau on the north, and
the Sātpura Range on the south. The plains of the
Chota Nāgpur Plateau in the eastern states of
Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand also lie within this
region. The rocky and uneven lands of the northern
peninsula are sparsely populated. Herding is a
major occupation in the west, and farming of coarse
grains such as millet is common in the central part.
In the southern part of peninsular India lies the
vast Deccan Plateau, a tableland lying within a
triangle formed by the Sātpura Range, the steep
mountain slopes of the Western Ghats, and the
gentler slopes of the Eastern Ghats. Elevations in
the plateau region average 600 m (2,000 ft),
although outcroppings as high as 1,200 m (4,000 ft)
occur. At their northern end, the Western Ghats
vary in height from 900 to 1,200 m (3,000 to 4,000
ft), but the Nīlgiri Hills of the extreme south
reach a height of 2,637 m (8,652 ft) at Doda Betta,
their highest peak. The Eastern Ghats lie along the
eastern flank of the Deccan Plateau, interrupted by
the Krishna and Godāvari river basins. Elevations
of the Eastern Ghats are much lower, averaging 600
m (2,000 ft). The plateau itself, even rockier than
the northern extension of peninsular India,
supports a sparse agricultural population and is
also home to industrial enterprises.
The Indian Peninsula is bordered by a mostly
fertile seashore. The west coast, including the
extensive Gujarāt Plain in the north, the thin
Konkan shore in Mahārāshtra state, and the Malabar
Coast in the south, support substantial populations
of farmers and fishermen. Ancient trade routes to
the west helped make the cities and towns of this
region into market centers for textiles and spices.
The east coast’s broad alluvial plains, stretching
from the Kāveri River delta in the south to the
Mahānadī River delta in the north, are intensely
farmed.
Guide On Travel