Structure and Physiography
1. Learning Objectives
After reading these notes, you will be able to:
2. Introduction
- The interplay of endogenic and exogenic forces + lateral plate movements gave India its present geological structure and geomorphological features.
- Based on geological structure, India is divided into three geological divisions:
β (i) The Peninsular Block
β (ii) The Himalayas and other Peninsular Mountains
β (iii) Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain
3. Geological Divisions of India
π€ The Peninsular Block
- Northern boundary: irregular line from Kachchh β Aravali range near Delhi β Yamuna β Ganga β Rajmahal Hills β Ganga delta.
- Extensions: Karbi Anglong and Meghalaya Plateau (northeast); Rajasthan (west).
- Formed by very ancient gneisses and granites β one of the oldest landmasses of India.
- Since the Cambrian period, it has stood like a rigid block. Part of the Indo-Australian Plate.
- Has undergone block faulting β rift valleys of Narmada, Tapi, Mahanadi and the Satpura block are examples.
- Mostly consists of relict and residual mountains: Aravali, Nallamala, Javadi, Veliconda, Palkonda, Mahendragiri hills.
- River valleys here are shallow with low gradients. East-flowing rivers form deltas β Mahanadi, Krishna, Kaveri, Godavari.
ποΈ The Himalayas and other Peninsular Mountains
- These are young, weak and flexible in geological structure β unlike the rigid Peninsular Block.
- Still subject to endogenic and exogenic forces β development of faults, folds and thrust plains.
- Tectonic in origin β dissected by fast-flowing rivers in their youthful stage.
- Landforms: gorges, V-shaped valleys, rapids, waterfalls β all indicate the youthful stage.
π Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain
- Formed by the plains of rivers Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra.
- Was originally a geo-synclinal depression β developed maximum ~64 million years ago during third phase of Himalayan formation.
- Since then, gradually filled by sediments from Himalayan and Peninsular rivers.
- Average depth of alluvial deposits: 1,000β2,000 m.
4. Physiography
5. The North and Northeastern Mountains
- Consists of the Himalayas and the Northeastern hills.
- Himalayas = series of parallel mountain ranges. Important ranges: Greater Himalayan range (includes Great Himalayas and Shiwalik).
- Length of Great Himalayan (central axial) range: ~2,500 km east to west. Width: 160β400 km north to south.
- Orientation varies by region:
β NW India: northwest to southeast
β Darjiling & Sikkim: eastβwest
β Arunachal Pradesh: southwest to northwest
β Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram: northβsouth - Himalayas act as a climatic, drainage, and cultural divide β not just a physical barrier.
6. The Northern Plains
- Formed by alluvial deposits of Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra rivers.
- Length: ~3,200 km (east to west). Width: 150β300 km. Alluvium depth: 1,000β2,000 m.
- General elevation: 50β150 m above mean sea level.
- Fertile alluvial soil supports crops: wheat, rice, sugarcane, jute β densely populated region.
- Haryana and Delhi form a water divide between the Indus and the Ganga river systems.
- Brahmaputra flows NE to SW β takes a sharp 90Β° southward turn at Dhubri before entering Bangladesh.
- Famous delta: Sunderbans delta β one of the largest deltas in the world.
π Four Zones of the Northern Plains (North to South)
1. Bhabar
Narrow belt 8β10 km parallel to Shiwalik foothills. Rivers deposit boulders & disappear underground.
2. Tarai
Width 10β20 km. Streams re-emerge β marshy, swampy. Dense forest, varied wildlife.
3. Bhangar
Old alluvial deposits β older, higher areas. Mature fluvial landforms like meanders, ox-bow lakes.
4. Khadar
New alluvial deposits β younger, fertile. Renewed every year by flood deposition.
7. The Peninsular Plateau
- Elevation: 150 m above river plains to 600β900 m. Irregular triangle shape.
- Outer extent: Delhi ridge (NW), Rajmahal hills (east), Gir range (west), Cardamom hills (south).
- Extension in northeast: Shillong and Karbi-Anglong plateau.
- One of the oldest and most stable landmasses of India.
- General elevation: west to east (proved by river flow direction).
- Important features: tors, block mountains, rift valleys, spurs, quartzite dykes.
- NW part has black soil. Famous ravines: Chambal, Bhind, Morena.
π Three Divisions of the Peninsular Plateau
π’ (i) The Deccan Plateau
- Bordered by Western Ghats (west), Eastern Ghats (east), Satpura + Maikal + Mahadeo hills (north)
- Western Ghats local names: Sahyadri (Maharashtra), Nilgiri hills (Karnataka/TN), Anaimalai & Cardamom hills (Kerala)
- Western Ghats avg elevation: ~1,500 m. Highest peak: Anaimudi (2,695 m) on Anaimalai hills
- Second highest: Dodabetta (2,637 m) on Nilgiri hills
- Eastern and Western Ghats meet at Nilgiri hills
- Eastern Ghats are discontinuous, low, and highly eroded
π (ii) The Central Highlands
- Bounded by Aravali range in the west
- Elevation: 700β1,000 m; slopes towards north and northeast
- Satpura range β classic example of relict mountains (600β900 m)
- Most Yamuna tributaries originate from Vindhyan and Kaimur ranges
- Extension: Rajmahal hills (east); rich mineral region β Chotanagpur plateau
- Near Jaisalmer: covered by longitudinal sand ridges and barchans (crescent-shaped sand dunes)
π£ (iii) The Northeastern Plateau
- Extension of the main Peninsular Block β separated due to fault between Rajmahal hills and Meghalaya plateau
- Meghalaya plateau sub-divided into: (i) Garo Hills (ii) Khasi Hills (iii) Jaintia Hills
- Extension also seen in Karbi Anglong hills, Assam
- Rich in minerals: coal, iron ore, sillimanite, limestone, uranium
- Receives heavy SW monsoon rainfall β highly eroded surface
- Cherrapunji β bare rocky surface, devoid of permanent vegetation
8. The Indian Desert
- Located to the northwest of the Aravali hills. Also called Marusthali or Thar Desert.
- Landforms: undulating topography, longitudinal dunes, barchans (crescent-shaped sand dunes).
- Rainfall: less than 150 mm/year β arid climate, sparse vegetation.
- Believed to have been under the sea during the Mesozoic era β evidence: wood fossils at Aakal, marine deposits near Brahmsar, Jaisalmer (wood-fossils ~180 million years old).
- Desert features: mushroom rocks, shifting dunes, oasis (mostly southern part).
- Orientation: northern part slopes towards Sindh, southern towards Rann of Kachchh.
- Most rivers are ephemeral. Luni river (in southern part) is significant.
- Low precipitation + high evaporation = water deficit region. Streams disappear β inland drainage, lakes and playas with brackish water (source of salt).
9. The Coastal Plains
π΅ Western Coastal Plains
- Example of submerged coastal plain β narrow belt
- Extends from Gujarat coast (north) to Kerala coast (south)
- Divisions: Kachchh & Kathiawar (Gujarat) Β· Konkan (Maharashtra) Β· Goan coast Β· Malabar coast (Karnataka & Kerala)
- Narrow in middle, broader towards north and south
- No delta formation β rivers flow directly into sea
- Malabar coast: Kayals (backwaters) β used for fishing, inland navigation, tourism
- Famous: Nehru Trophy Vallamkali (boat race) at Punnamada Kayal, Kerala
- Important ports: Kandla, Mazagaon, JLN Port Navha Sheva, Marmagao, Mangalore, Cochin
π’ Eastern Coastal Plains
- Example of emergent coast β broader than western coast
- Well-developed deltas formed by Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri
- Emergent nature β fewer ports and harbours
- Continental shelf extends up to 500 km into the sea β difficult to develop ports
Eastern coast = Emergent β Broader β Deltas formed Β· Fewer ports
10. The Islands
π΅ Andaman & Nicobar Islands (Bay of Bengal)
- About 572 islands/islets
- Located between 6Β°Nβ14Β°N and 92Β°Eβ94Β°E
- Two principal groups: Ritchie’s archipelago and Labrynth island
- Divided into: Andaman (north) and Nicobar (south)
- Separated by Ten Degree Channel
- Believed to be elevated submarine mountains; some smaller islands are volcanic in origin
- Barren Island β only active volcano in India
- Important peaks: Saddle Peak (738 m), Mt. Diavolo (515 m), Mt. Koyob (460 m), Mt. Thuiller (642 m)
- Coral deposits, beautiful beaches; equatorial type vegetation
- Receive convectional rainfall
π’ Lakshadweep Islands (Arabian Sea)
- Include Lakshadweep and Minicoy
- Located between 8Β°Nβ12Β°N and 71Β°Eβ74Β°E
- Distance: 220β440 km off Kerala coast
- Entire group built of coral deposits
- ~36 islands, of which 11 are inhabited
- Largest island: Minicoy (453 sq. km)
- Divided by Nine Degree Channel β Amini Island (north) and Canannore Island (south)
- Storm beaches on eastern seaboard: pebbles, shingles, cobbles, boulders
Summary β Quick Revision
Earth = ~4,600 million years old. Indian plate moved northward β still moving β shapes India’s landforms.
Three geological divisions: Peninsular Block (oldest, rigid), Himalayas (young, flexible), Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain (alluvial).
Six physiographic divisions: Northern Mountains Β· Northern Plains Β· Peninsular Plateau Β· Indian Desert Β· Coastal Plains Β· Islands.
Himalayas: length ~2,500 km, width 160β400 km. Act as physical, climatic, drainage and cultural divide.
Northern Plains: 3,200 km long, 4 zones β Bhabar β Tarai β Bhangar β Khadar from north to south.
Peninsular Plateau has 3 divisions: Deccan Plateau (Anaimudi 2,695 m is highest peak), Central Highlands, Northeastern Plateau (Meghalaya, Karbi Anglong).
Indian Desert (Marusthali): rainfall < 150 mm/year. Features: barchans, mushroom rocks, shifting dunes. Luni is the significant river here.
Western coast = submerged, narrow, natural ports, Kayals. Eastern coast = emergent, broader, large deltas.
Andaman & Nicobar (~572 islands, Bay of Bengal) separated by Ten Degree Channel. Barren Island = only active volcano in India.
Lakshadweep (~36 islands, Arabian Sea) = entirely coral deposits. Largest island = Minicoy (453 sq. km). Divided by Nine Degree Channel.
Important Terms to Remember
- Endogenic Forces: Forces originating from inside the earth (e.g., earthquakes, volcanic activity, plate movement).
- Exogenic Forces: Forces originating from outside the earth (e.g., weathering, erosion by rivers, wind, ice).
- Physiography: The study of the physical features (landforms) of an area β outcome of structure, process and stage of development.
- Geo-synclinal Depression: A long, narrow depression in the earth’s crust where sediments accumulate over millions of years. The Indo-Gangetic Plain was originally this.
- Bhabar: Narrow 8β10 km belt below Shiwalik foothills where rivers deposit boulders and disappear underground.
- Tarai: 10β20 km belt south of Bhabar where rivers re-emerge, creating marshy swampy conditions with dense forest and wildlife.
- Bhangar: Old alluvial deposits in the Northern Plains β older, higher areas.
- Khadar: New alluvial deposits in the Northern Plains β younger, more fertile areas near rivers.
- Barchan: A crescent-shaped sand dune found in deserts.
- Marusthali: Another name for the Thar Desert (Great Indian Desert).
- Kayals: Backwaters (lagoons) along the Malabar coast of Kerala, used for fishing, inland navigation and tourism.
- Ten Degree Channel: Water body separating the Andaman Islands from the Nicobar Islands.
- Nine Degree Channel: Water body dividing the Lakshadweep island group into Amini Island (north) and Canannore Island (south).
- Barren Island: Located in Andaman & Nicobar Islands β the only active volcano in India.
- Anaimudi: Highest peak (2,695 m) of the Peninsular Plateau β located on Anaimalai hills (Western Ghats).
