Map of India
Introduction
Map reading is an essential skill in geography. An outline map of India shows the country's physical features, rivers, cities, and ports. Understanding these features — their location and significance — is a key part of the ICSE geography syllabus. This chapter covers the major physical divisions of India, important rivers, cities, ports, and the basics of reading topographic maps.
Section 1: Physical Features of India
India's physical features can be divided into six major divisions:
| Physical Division | Description | States/Regions Covered |
|---|---|---|
| The Northern Mountains | The Himalayas — world's youngest mountain range | Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Arunachal |
| The Northern Plains | Alluvial plains formed by Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra rivers | Punjab, Haryana, UP, Bihar, West Bengal, Assam |
| The Peninsular Plateau | Oldest landmass — Deccan Plateau | Maharashtra, MP, Karnataka, Andhra, Telangana, Tamil Nadu |
| The Coastal Plains | Eastern and Western coastal strips | Gujarat, Maharashtra, Goa, Kerala, TN, AP, Odisha, WB |
| The Thar Desert | Sandy, arid region | Rajasthan, Gujarat |
| The Islands | Andaman & Nicobar (Bay of Bengal), Lakshadweep (Arabian Sea) | Union Territories |
A. The Northern Mountains (The Himalayas)
The Himalayas stretch from Jammu & Kashmir in the west to Arunachal Pradesh in the east, covering ~2,500 km.
Three Parallel Ranges (from north to south):
| Range | Average Height | Key Peaks |
|---|---|---|
| Himadri (Greater Himalayas) | 6,000+ metres | Mount Everest (8,848 m — in Nepal), Kanchenjunga (8,586 m — Sikkim), Nanga Parbat, Nanda Devi |
| Himachal (Lesser Himalayas) | 3,700–4,500 metres | Pir Panjal, Dhaula Dhar, Mahabharat ranges |
| Shiwaliks (Outer Himalayas) | 900–1,200 metres | Foothills — narrowest and lowest range |
Important Himalayan passes: Nathu La (Sikkim), Shipki La (Himachal), Zoji La (J&K), Rohtang Pass (Himachal)
B. The Northern Plains
The northern plains are formed by three major river systems:
| River System | Region | States |
|---|---|---|
| Indus | Western part | Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, Haryana |
| Ganga | Central part | Uttarakhand, UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal |
| Brahmaputra | Eastern part | Arunachal, Assam |
The plains are extremely fertile alluvial soil — India's 'breadbasket.'
C. The Peninsular Plateau
The peninsular plateau is the oldest and most stable landmass in India. It is divided into:
| Region | Description | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Central Highlands | North of the Narmada River | Vindhya and Satpura ranges; Malwa plateau |
| Deccan Plateau | South of the Narmada | Triangular plateau; Western and Eastern Ghats |
Western Ghats vs Eastern Ghats:
| Feature | Western Ghats | Eastern Ghats |
|---|---|---|
| Height | Higher (900–1,600 m) | Lower (600–900 m) |
| Continuity | Continuous | Discontinuous (cut by rivers) |
| Highest peak | Anamudi (2,695 m, Kerala) | Mahendragiri (1,501 m, Odisha) |
| Rivers | West-flowing (brief, swift) | East-flowing (longer, forming deltas) |
D. The Coastal Plains
| Coast | Length | States | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Western Coast | ~1,400 km | Gujarat, Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala | Narrow; Malabar Coast (south), Konkan Coast (centre), Gujarat Coast (north) |
| Eastern Coast | ~1,600 km | TN, AP, Odisha, WB | Broader; Coromandel Coast (south), Northern Circars (centre), delta region |
E. The Islands
- Andaman & Nicobar Islands: Bay of Bengal — 572 islands; volcanic origin
- Lakshadweep Islands: Arabian Sea — 36 islands; coral origin
- Significance: Strategic importance, tourism, biodiversity
Section 2: Major Rivers of India
Himalayan Rivers (Perennial — flow year-round)
| River | Origin | Length (km) | Major Tributaries | States Flowed Through |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ganga | Gangotri Glacier (Uttarakhand) | 2,525 | Yamuna, Ghaghara, Gandak, Kosi | Uttarakhand, UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, WB |
| Yamuna | Yamunotri Glacier | 1,376 | Chambal, Betwa, Ken | Uttarakhand, UP, Haryana |
| Brahmaputra | Himalayas (Tibet) | 2,900 (in India: 916) | Dibang, Lohit, Subansiri | Arunachal, Assam |
| Indus | Tibet | 3,180 (in India: 1,114) | Sutlej, Beas, Ravi, Chenab, Jhelum | J&K, Ladakh |
Peninsular Rivers (Seasonal — dependent on monsoon)
| River | Origin | Length (km) | Mouth / Delta | States Flowed Through |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Narmada | Amarkantak (MP) | 1,312 | Gulf of Khambhat (west-flowing) | MP, Maharashtra, Gujarat |
| Tapi | Satpura (MP) | 724 | Gulf of Khambhat (west-flowing) | MP, Maharashtra, Gujarat |
| Godavari | Nasik (Maharashtra) | 1,465 | Bay of Bengal (largest peninsular) | Maharashtra, Telangana, AP |
| Krishna | Mahabaleshwar (Maharashtra) | 1,400 | Bay of Bengal | Maharashtra, Karnataka, AP |
| Mahanadi | Chhattisgarh | 858 | Bay of Bengal | Chhattisgarh, Odisha |
| Kaveri | Brahmagiri (Karnataka) | 800 | Bay of Bengal | Karnataka, Tamil Nadu |
Section 3: Major Cities and Ports
Important Cities (Capital and Major)
| City | State | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Delhi | National Capital Territory | Capital of India |
| Mumbai | Maharashtra | Financial capital; film industry |
| Kolkata | West Bengal | Cultural capital; major port |
| Chennai | Tamil Nadu | Southern metropolis; IT hub |
| Bengaluru | Karnataka | IT capital; 'Silicon Valley of India' |
| Hyderabad | Telangana | IT and pharmaceutical hub |
| Ahmedabad | Gujarat | 'Manchester of India' |
Major Ports
| Port | State | Coast | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mumbai | Maharashtra | West | India's largest port |
| Jawaharlal Nehru Port (Nhava Sheva) | Maharashtra | West | Largest container port |
| Kandla (Deendayal) | Gujarat | West | Major port; handles crude oil |
| Chennai | Tamil Nadu | East | Second largest container port |
| Kolkata | West Bengal | East | Major port on Hooghly River |
| Vishakhapatnam | Andhra Pradesh | East | Deep-water port |
| Paradip | Odisha | East | Major port for minerals |
| Cochin | Kerala | West | Natural harbour; spices |
Section 4: Topographic Map Reading (Basics)
What is a Topographic Map?
A topographic map shows the physical features of an area — relief (height), drainage (rivers), vegetation, settlements, transport, and other man-made features. In ICSE, you need to understand the basics of reading these maps.
Key Elements of a Topographic Map
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Contour lines | Lines joining points of equal height above sea level |
| Contour interval | Vertical distance between two consecutive contours (usually 20 metres) |
| Scale | Ratio of map distance to ground distance (e.g., 1:50,000 means 1 cm = 500 m) |
| Grid references | Four-figure and six-figure grid references to locate features |
| Conventional signs and symbols | Standard symbols for features (roads, railways, rivers, settlements) |
Interpreting Contour Lines
| Pattern | Feature |
|---|---|
| Concentric circles with numbers increasing inward | Hill / summit |
| V-shaped contours pointing uphill | Valley |
| V-shaped contours pointing downhill | Ridge |
| Widely spaced contours | Gentle slope |
| Closely spaced contours | Steep slope |
| Contours merging | Cliff |
| Hatched lines (hachures) | Depressions |
Common Conventional Symbols
| Feature | Symbol on Map |
|---|---|
| Metalled road | Double line |
| Unmetalled road | Single dashed line |
| Railway | Line with cross-bars |
| River / stream | Blue wavy line |
| Canal | Blue line with parallel banks |
| Well / tank | Blue circle or shape |
| Forest / vegetation | Green shaded or tree symbols |
| Settlement / village | Small black or red shapes |
| Temple / mosque | Symbol with religious sign |
| Post office | P.O. |
| Bench mark | B.M. with height |
ICSE Exam Focus
| Question Type | Marks | Key Areas |
|---|---|---|
| Physical features on map | 4 | Himalayas, Northern Plains, Deccan Plateau, coasts, islands |
| Rivers | 4 | Locating major rivers and their tributaries |
| Cities and ports | 3 | Locating important cities and ports |
| Topographic maps | 3 | Contour interpretation, conventional symbols, grid references |
Common Mistakes in ICSE Exams
| Mistake | Correction |
|---|---|
| Confusing Western and Eastern Ghats | Western Ghats are higher and continuous; Eastern Ghats are lower and discontinuous |
| Forgetting which rivers flow west | Only Narmada and Tapi flow west into the Arabian Sea |
| Missing the Himalayan vs Peninsular river difference | Himalayan rivers are perennial; Peninsular rivers are seasonal |
| Ignoring contour intervals | Always check the contour interval before reading heights |
| Confusing 4-figure and 6-figure grid references | 4-figure gives a 1 km square; 6-figure gives a 100 m square |
Self-Test Questions
Q1: Name the six major physical divisions of India. A1: The six physical divisions are: (1) Northern Mountains (Himalayas), (2) Northern Plains, (3) Peninsular Plateau, (4) Coastal Plains, (5) Thar Desert, and (6) Islands (Andaman & Nicobar, Lakshadweep).
Q2: Differentiate between the Western Ghats and the Eastern Ghats. A2: The Western Ghats are higher (900–1,600 m), continuous, and run along the western coast. The Eastern Ghats are lower (600–900 m), discontinuous (cut by rivers), and run along the eastern coast.
Q3: Which are the two major west-flowing rivers of the Peninsular plateau? A3: The Narmada and the Tapi are the only major peninsular rivers that flow westward into the Arabian Sea. All other peninsular rivers flow eastward into the Bay of Bengal.
Q4: What is a contour line and what does the spacing of contours indicate? A4: A contour line joins points of equal height above sea level. Closely spaced contours indicate a steep slope; widely spaced contours indicate a gentle slope.
Q5: Name the major ports on the eastern and western coasts of India. A5: Western coast: Mumbai, JNPT (Nhava Sheva), Kandla, Cochin. Eastern coast: Chennai, Kolkata, Vishakhapatnam, Paradip.
Key Facts to Remember
| Feature | Key Point |
|---|---|
| Highest peak in India | Kanchenjunga (8,586 m) — Sikkim |
| Longest river | Ganga (2,525 km) |
| Largest river basin | Ganga-Brahmaputra basin |
| Largest peninsular river | Godavari (1,465 km) |
| Only west-flowing rivers | Narmada and Tapi |
| Highest peak in Western Ghats | Anamudi (2,695 m) |
| Largest port | Mumbai |
| Number of states and UTs | 28 states + 8 UTs |
Final Summary
The map of India showcases extraordinary physical diversity — from the snow-capped Himalayas in the north to the tropical coastal plains in the south, from the Thar Desert in the west to the rain-drenched northeast. India's rivers — both the perennial Himalayan rivers and the seasonal Peninsular rivers — have shaped its civilisation and agriculture. Important cities and ports mark the country's economic and cultural geography. For ICSE students, the ability to read and interpret maps — both physical maps and topographic maps — is a core geographical skill that brings all of India's geography together on a single canvas.
