Structure and Physiography
"India is a subcontinent — not just politically, but geologically. It has every landscape Earth can offer."
1. Chapter Overview
India's physical landscape can be divided into SIX MAJOR PHYSIOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS: (1) The Northern Mountains (Himalayas), (2) The Northern Plains, (3) The Peninsular Plateau, (4) The Indian Desert, (5) The Coastal Plains, and (6) The Islands. Each has a distinct GEOLOGICAL ORIGIN, STRUCTURE, and RELIEF.
2. The Six Physiographic Divisions
1. The Himalayas (Northern Mountains)
- YOUNG FOLD MOUNTAINS — still rising
- Stretch: 2,400 km (Indus gorge, west → Brahmaputra gorge, east). Arc-shaped.
- Width: 400 km (Kashmir) to 150 km (Arunachal)
- Three parallel ranges:
- Greater Himalayas (Himadri): HIGHEST range. Average 6,000 m. Mount Everest (8,849 m) in Nepal; Kanchenjunga (8,586 m, India's highest, Sikkim). Glaciers (Gangotri, Yamunotri) = source of major rivers.
- Lesser Himalayas (Himachal): 3,700-4,500 m. Pir Panjal, Dhauladhar ranges. Famous hill stations: Shimla, Mussoorie, Nainital, Darjeeling.
- Shiwaliks (Outer): 900-1,200 m. Youngest range. Duns (flat-floored valleys: Dehradun, Patli Dun, Kotli Dun).
2. The Northern Plains
- Formed by ALLUVIUM deposited by the Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra river systems
- Area: ~7 lakh km². Very FLAT, very FERTILE — the 'Granary of India'
- Densely populated
- Three sections: Punjab Plains (west), Ganga Plains (central), Brahmaputra Plains (east)
- Khadar: newer alluvium, replenished by floods, VERY fertile
- Bhangar: older alluvium, higher terraces, has kankar (lime nodules)
- Bhabar: narrow belt (8-16 km) at Himalayan foot. Coarse pebbles. Rivers DISAPPEAR underground here.
- Terai: south of Bhabar. Marshy, thickly forested (originally). Rivers RE-EMERGE.
3. The Peninsular Plateau
- ANCIENT crystalline rocks — some of the oldest on Earth (3+ billion years)
- Divided by the Narmada River:
- Central Highlands (north of Narmada): Malwa Plateau, Bundelkhand, Baghelkhand
- Deccan Plateau (south of Narmada): larger, sloping eastward. Black soil (regur) region.
- Western edge: Western Ghats (Sahyadri). Continuous, higher (average 900-1,600 m). Anaimudi (Kerala, 2,695 m) = highest peak in Peninsular India.
- Eastern edge: Eastern Ghats. Discontinuous, lower. Cut by rivers (Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri).
- The two Ghats MEET at the Nilgiri Hills.
4. The Indian Desert (Thar)
- Western Rajasthan. Low rainfall (<15 cm/year).
- Sandy plains with sand dunes (barchans, longitudinal).
- Luni River: only significant river — inland drainage (doesn't reach the sea)
- Sparse vegetation (xerophytic — cactus, khejri, thorn bushes)
5. The Coastal Plains
- Western Coastal Plain: narrow (50-80 km). Submerged coast → natural harbours (Mumbai, Kochi, Marmagao). Drained by SHORT, FAST rivers.
- Eastern Coastal Plain: wider (100-130 km). EMERGENT coast. DELTAS of Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri. Lagoons: Chilika (Odisha, largest), Pulicat.
- Northern part of Eastern coast: Northern Circars. Southern: Coromandel Coast.
- Western coast: Konkan (Mumbai-Goa), Malabar (Kerala).
6. The Islands
- Andaman & Nicobar (Bay of Bengal): 572 islands. Volcanic origin (part of submerged mountain chain — extension of Arakan Yoma). Indira Point (southernmost). Barren Island: India's only ACTIVE VOLCANO.
- Lakshadweep (Arabian Sea): 36 coral islands. Atoll formations. Small, low-lying.
3. Geological History in Brief
- Peninsular Plateau: part of GONDWANALAND (supercontinent). Ancient, stable.
- Himalayas: formed when the INDIAN PLATE collided with EURASIAN PLATE (~50 million years ago). The Tethys Sea sediments were FOLDED UP → the Himalayas.
- Northern Plains: formed from ALLUVIUM brought by Himalayan rivers. A DEEP TROUGH filled over millions of years. One of the deepest alluvial fills in the world.
- The Indian Desert: the extension of the Peninsular Plateau, covered by sand.
4. Exam Focus
- The 6 physiographic divisions — names and brief description
- Three Himalayan ranges (Himadri, Himachal, Shiwaliks) with characteristics
- Bhabar and Terai — what and where
- Western vs Eastern Ghats comparison
- Western vs Eastern Coastal Plains comparison
- Geological origin: Peninsular Plateau (Gondwana) vs Himalayas (Tethys collision)
5. Conclusion
India's physical diversity is staggering — and ALL of it is explained by PLATE TECTONICS and GEOLOGICAL TIME:
- Himalayas: young, rising, folded. The collision that built the roof of the world.
- Northern Plains: filled by rivers. The fertile heartland.
- Peninsular Plateau: ancient, stable. The geological core.
- Desert, Coasts, Islands: the edges — each unique.
India: a subcontinent because one plate crashed into another, and the rest was shaped by rivers, wind, and waves.
