By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Identify the six physiographic divisions of India: Himalayas, Northern Plains, Peninsular Plateau, Indian Desert, Coastal Plains, Islands
  • 2Describe the three parallel ranges of the Himalayas (Himadri, Himachal, Shivaliks) and their characteristics
  • 3Name the five regional divisions of the Himalayas (Punjab, Kumaon, Nepal, Assam Himalayas, Purvanchal)
  • 4Distinguish Bhabar, Tarai, Bhangar, Khadar — subdivisions of the Northern Plains
  • 5Identify the Central Highlands and Deccan Plateau as parts of the Peninsular Plateau
  • 6Describe the Western and Eastern Ghats — meeting at the Nilgiris
  • 7Explain the formation and features of the Thar Desert
  • 8Distinguish the Western and Eastern Coastal Plains and identify major ports
  • 9Identify the Andaman & Nicobar Islands (Bay of Bengal) and Lakshadweep Islands (Arabian Sea)
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Why this chapter matters
India's physical features explain its climate, agriculture, transport, population distribution, and economy. Every other Geography chapter (Drainage, Climate, Vegetation, Population) builds on this foundation.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Physical Features of India — Class 9 (CBSE)

India has every major physical feature on Earth — the world's highest mountains, vast alluvial plains, ancient plateaus, hot deserts, long coastlines, and tropical islands. This chapter explains why: India is the result of one of the most dramatic continental collisions in Earth's history, between the Indian Plate and the Eurasian Plate. The result is six distinct physiographic divisions, each with its own geological story.


1. The story — plate tectonics and India

About 140 million years ago, India was part of the supercontinent Gondwanaland — connected to Africa, South America, Australia, and Antarctica. The breakup of Gondwanaland began ~ 65 million years ago.

The Indian Plate drifted northward at the unusually fast rate of ~ 15 cm/year (most plates move 1-5 cm/year). It crashed into the Eurasian Plate around 50 million years ago. The collision continues today, lifting the Himalayas by ~ 5 mm/year.

This single tectonic event explains India's geography:

  • Himalayas formed by collision-induced uplift.
  • Northern Plains formed by sediment deposition from rivers draining the Himalayas.
  • The Peninsular Plateau is the ancient Indian Plate from Gondwanaland.
  • The Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea are the seas around the moving continent.

2. The six physiographic divisions

India can be divided into six major physiographic divisions:

                                    INDIA
                                      │
        ┌────────────────┬────────────┴────────────┬────────────────┐
        │                │                         │                │
   Himalayas      Northern Plains              Peninsular           Coastal
                  (Indo-Gangetic)               Plateau              Plains
        │                                          │                │
        ├─────── Indian Desert ──────────────────┤                Islands
        │      (Thar, western Rajasthan)         │                (Andaman,
        │                                        │                Lakshadweep)
        └────────────────────────────────────────┘

(Actually: Himalayas, Northern Plains, Peninsular Plateau, Indian Desert, Coastal Plains, Islands — six divisions.)

We'll examine each.


3. The Himalayas

The world's highest mountain range. Stretches across the northern frontier of India.

Three parallel ranges

The Himalayas have three nearly parallel ranges (from north to south):

  1. Himadri / Greater Himalayas — northernmost, highest. Average altitude 6,000+ m. Permanent snow.
  2. Himachal / Middle Himalayas — middle range. Average altitude 3,700-4,500 m. Famous hill stations (Shimla, Mussoorie, Nainital, Darjeeling).
  3. Shivaliks — southernmost, lowest. Average altitude 900-1,100 m. Made of soft sediment, prone to landslides.

Regional divisions (west to east)

The Himalayas are divided into five regions by the rivers cutting through them:

  1. Punjab Himalayas — between Indus and Sutlej rivers.
  2. Kumaon Himalayas — between Sutlej and Kali rivers.
  3. Nepal Himalayas — between Kali and Tista rivers. Tallest peaks (Everest, K2 in Karakoram).
  4. Assam Himalayas — between Tista and Dihang rivers. Steepest, wettest.
  5. Purvanchal — eastern hill ranges that continue south, forming India's borders with Myanmar.

Important Himalayan peaks

PeakHeightCountry
Mount Everest8,848 mNepal-China border
K2 (Karakoram)8,611 mIndia-Pakistan border
Kangchenjunga8,586 mIndia-Nepal border
Nanga Parbat8,126 mPakistan-India

K2 is in the Karakoram Range, a sub-range of the Himalayas in Indian-administered Kashmir.


4. The Northern Plains (Indo-Gangetic Plains)

India's most fertile region — formed by sediment deposition from the Himalayan rivers.

Formation

Over millions of years, the Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra rivers have eroded the Himalayas and deposited the eroded material (alluvium) in the lowlands south of the mountains. This created vast plains:

  • Indus Plain (mostly in Pakistan) — extends into Indian Punjab and Haryana.
  • Ganga Plain — from Haryana to West Bengal.
  • Brahmaputra Plain — Assam.

Subdivisions of the Northern Plains

Based on relief variations:

  1. Bhabar — narrow belt at the foothills. Composed of pebbles brought down by rivers. Rivers disappear into this belt and re-emerge below.
  2. Tarai — south of Bhabar. Wet, marshy, fertile land. Originally densely forested; now mostly converted to agriculture.
  3. Bhangar — older alluvium, slightly above flood level. Less fertile than Khadar.
  4. Khadar — newer alluvium, flooded every year. Most fertile.

Economic importance

The Northern Plains are home to:

  • ~ 40% of India's population.
  • Most of India's wheat and rice production.
  • Mughal-era cities (Delhi, Lucknow, Kolkata).
  • The Ganga River — sacred to Hindus.

5. The Peninsular Plateau

The oldest land in India. A massive triangular plateau covering most of central and southern India.

Geological history

Originally part of Gondwanaland, the Peninsular Plateau is composed of ancient (Precambrian) rocks — much older than the Himalayas (which are only 50 million years old).

Two main parts

(a) Central Highlands

  • North of the Narmada River.
  • Includes the Aravali Mountains (one of the oldest in the world), Vindhya Range, Satpura Range.
  • Western parts: Malwa Plateau.
  • Eastern parts: Bundelkhand, Baghelkhand.
  • Drained by Chambal, Betwa, Ken rivers (north into the Yamuna and Ganga).

(b) Deccan Plateau

  • South of the Narmada.
  • A triangular plateau bounded by the Western Ghats (west), Eastern Ghats (east), and Vindhyas/Satpuras (north).
  • Major rivers (Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri) flow east across the plateau.

Famous features

  • Western Ghats — also called Sahyadri. Continuous mountain range parallel to the western coast. Heavily forested, rainy.
  • Eastern Ghats — less continuous, lower than Western Ghats. Heavily eroded.
  • Nilgiri Hills — meeting of Western and Eastern Ghats. Famous for tea plantations and Western Ghats wildlife.
  • Anai Mudi — highest peak in South India, 2,695 m (Western Ghats, Kerala).

Economic importance

  • Major mineral reserves: iron ore (Karnataka, Odisha), bauxite (Jharkhand), manganese (MP), coal (Jharkhand, MP, WB).
  • Black soil (regur) in Deccan — ideal for cotton.
  • Major rivers for hydroelectricity and irrigation.

6. The Indian Desert (Thar)

The 9th largest desert in the world. Located in western Rajasthan.

Features

  • Area: ~ 200,000 sq km.
  • Annual rainfall: less than 150 mm in many places.
  • Temperatures: up to 50°C in summer, near 0°C in winter nights.
  • Sand dunes (Barchans), rocky areas, salt lakes.

Climate

  • Hot desert — extreme temperatures.
  • Dry — even monsoon brings little rain.
  • Sandstorms common (April-July).

Inhabitants

  • Population density very low.
  • Pastoral nomads (Bishnoi, Bhil, Raika).
  • Some settled agriculture using groundwater.
  • Modern: solar and wind power development (one of India's largest renewable energy regions).

Why a desert?

The Thar Desert is at 27-29° N latitude — the band where global subtropical high-pressure systems push dry air downward. Plus, the desert is in the rain shadow of:

  • The Aravali Mountains (to the south).
  • The Himalayas (to the north).

The Aravalis block monsoon winds blowing northward from the Indian Ocean.


7. The Coastal Plains

India has ~ 7,500 km of coastline. The coastal plains are narrow strips of low-lying land bordering the coast.

Western Coastal Plains

Stretches from Gujarat to Kerala. Three subdivisions:

  1. Konkan (Maharashtra, Goa) — narrow plain.
  2. Karnataka coast — narrow plain.
  3. Malabar Coast (Kerala) — slightly wider; has backwaters (lagoons connected to the sea).

The Western Ghats run parallel to the coast just inland. Major ports: Mumbai (Maharashtra), Mormugao (Goa), Mangalore (Karnataka), Kochi (Kerala).

Eastern Coastal Plains

Stretches from West Bengal to Tamil Nadu. Wider than the Western Coastal Plains. Subdivisions:

  1. Coromandel Coast (Tamil Nadu, southern Andhra) — south.
  2. Northern Circars (northern Andhra, Odisha) — north.

The Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, and Kaveri rivers form large deltas where they meet the Bay of Bengal.

Major ports: Chennai (Tamil Nadu), Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh), Paradip (Odisha), Kolkata (West Bengal).


8. The Islands

India has two major island groups:

Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Bay of Bengal)

  • ~ 572 islands (only ~ 38 inhabited).
  • Located in the Bay of Bengal.
  • Tropical rainforests, coral reefs.
  • Home to indigenous tribes (Sentinelese, Onge, Jarawa, Shompen).
  • Strategic location: controls approach to the Strait of Malacca.

Lakshadweep Islands (Arabian Sea)

  • 36 coral islands (only 10 inhabited).
  • Located off the Kerala coast.
  • Smaller than the Andamans.
  • Coral atolls and lagoons.
  • Tourism, fishing economy.

9. Summary table — six divisions

DivisionLocationFormationKey features
HimalayasNorthPlate collision (50 mya)World's highest mountains
Northern PlainsNorth-centralRiver sedimentMost fertile, densely populated
Peninsular PlateauCentral-SouthAncient GondwanalandOldest, mineral-rich
Indian DesertWest (Rajasthan)Rain shadow + subtropical aridityHot, dry, sandy
Coastal PlainsEast and West coastsRiver deltas + sedimentationFishing, trade, agriculture
IslandsSouth (Indian Ocean)Tectonic/coralTropical, strategic

10. Closing thought

Every part of India tells a different geological story:

  • The Himalayas — youngest, still rising, world's highest.
  • The Northern Plains — sediment from the Himalayas, world's most fertile.
  • The Peninsular Plateau — ancient Gondwanaland, mineral-rich.
  • The Thar Desert — hot, dry, ancient.
  • The Coastal Plains — river deltas, where land meets sea.
  • The Islands — outposts of India in distant seas.

This physical diversity is the foundation of India's:

  • Climatic diversity (covered in Chapter 4 — Climate).
  • Agricultural diversity (different crops for different regions).
  • Cultural diversity (different communities adapted to different terrains).
  • Biological diversity (different ecosystems for different species).

In the rest of Class 9 Geography (Drainage, Climate, Vegetation, Population), you'll see how these physical features shape water, weather, plants, and people. This chapter is the foundation.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Six physiographic divisions
Himalayas + Northern Plains + Peninsular Plateau + Indian Desert + Coastal Plains + Islands
Memorise all six.
Himalayan parallel ranges
Himadri (Greater) + Himachal (Middle) + Shivaliks (Lower)
North to south. Heights 6000m+, 3700-4500m, 900-1100m.
Himalayan regional divisions
Punjab, Kumaon, Nepal, Assam Himalayas + Purvanchal (east)
Divided by Indus, Sutlej, Kali, Tista, Dihang rivers.
Northern Plains subdivisions
Bhabar (pebble belt) + Tarai (marshy) + Bhangar (older alluvium) + Khadar (newer alluvium)
Bhabar is at foothills; Khadar is annually flooded river-side belts.
Peninsular Plateau two parts
Central Highlands (north of Narmada) + Deccan Plateau (south of Narmada)
Narmada River is the dividing line.
Mountain ranges in Plateau
Aravalis (west) + Vindhyas (centre) + Satpuras (south of Narmada) + Western Ghats + Eastern Ghats
Memorise their relative positions.
Highest peaks
Everest 8848m (Nepal/China) · K2 8611m (India/Pakistan) · Kangchenjunga 8586m (India/Nepal)
Three of the world's highest peaks border India.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying Himalayas are part of the Peninsular Plateau
They are SEPARATE divisions. Himalayas are young (50 mya) and folded; Peninsular Plateau is ancient (millions of years older) and Precambrian rock. Different geological origins.
WATCH OUT
Confusing Bhangar and Khadar
Bhangar = OLDER alluvium (above flood level, less fertile). Khadar = NEWER alluvium (annually flooded, more fertile).
WATCH OUT
Saying Aravalis are in the Himalayas
Aravalis are in the PENINSULAR PLATEAU, NOT the Himalayas. They are one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world (older than the Himalayas).
WATCH OUT
Treating the Western Ghats and Eastern Ghats as the same
Different. Western Ghats are CONTINUOUS, parallel to the coast (Sahyadri). Eastern Ghats are DISCONTINUOUS, eroded by rivers (Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri). Both meet in the Nilgiris.
WATCH OUT
Saying the Thar Desert is in Pakistan
The Thar Desert extends across western Rajasthan (India) AND eastern Sindh (Pakistan). The Indian portion is the major part. Don't say it's ONLY in Pakistan.
WATCH OUT
Counting the Himalayan parallel ranges wrong
THREE parallel ranges: Himadri (Greater, north), Himachal (Middle), Shivaliks (Lower, south). Not 2 or 4. Memorise all three by name.
WATCH OUT
Saying Lakshadweep Islands are in Bay of Bengal
Lakshadweep Islands are in the ARABIAN SEA (off Kerala coast). Andaman & Nicobar Islands are in the BAY OF BENGAL.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Identify
Name the six physiographic divisions of India.
Show solution
Step 1 — List. 1. Himalayas (north). 2. Northern Plains (north-central). 3. Peninsular Plateau (central-south). 4. Indian Desert (Thar, west). 5. Coastal Plains (east and west coasts). 6. Islands (Andaman & Nicobar in Bay of Bengal; Lakshadweep in Arabian Sea). ✦ Answer: Himalayas, Northern Plains, Peninsular Plateau, Indian Desert, Coastal Plains, Islands.
Q2EASY· Himalayas
Name the three parallel ranges of the Himalayas.
Show solution
Step 1 — North to south. 1. Himadri / Greater Himalayas (avg. altitude 6000+ m). Permanent snow. 2. Himachal / Middle Himalayas (3700-4500 m). Hill stations. 3. Shivaliks / Outer Himalayas (900-1100 m). Soft rocks. ✦ Answer: Himadri, Himachal, Shivaliks (from north to south).
Q3EASY· Plains
What is the difference between Bhabar and Tarai?
Show solution
Step 1 — Bhabar. • Narrow belt at the FOOTHILLS of the Himalayas. • Composed of PEBBLES and coarse sediments brought down by rivers. • Rivers ENTERING this region DISAPPEAR into the porous pebble bed. • Width: about 8-10 km along the entire Himalayan front. Step 2 — Tarai. • Belt SOUTH OF the Bhabar. • Wet, MARSHY, low-lying. • Rivers that disappeared into Bhabar RE-EMERGE here as streams. • Originally densely forested; now mostly cleared for agriculture. Step 3 — Together they form a transition from mountains to plains. ✦ Answer: Bhabar is a narrow pebble belt at the Himalayan foothills where rivers disappear; Tarai is the wet, marshy belt south of Bhabar where these rivers re-emerge. Both are subdivisions of the Northern Plains.
Q4EASY· Plateau
What is the difference between the Central Highlands and the Deccan Plateau?
Show solution
Step 1 — Central Highlands. • NORTH of the Narmada River. • Includes the Aravalis (west), Vindhyas (south), and Bundelkhand/Baghelkhand (east). • Drained by Chambal, Betwa, Ken rivers (flowing north into the Yamuna/Ganga). Step 2 — Deccan Plateau. • SOUTH of the Narmada River. • Triangular shape, bounded by Western Ghats (west) and Eastern Ghats (east). • Drained by Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri rivers (flowing east into the Bay of Bengal). Step 3 — Common feature. Both are ancient land (Precambrian rocks, originally part of Gondwanaland). ✦ Answer: Central Highlands lie NORTH of the Narmada River (Aravalis, Vindhyas, Bundelkhand); Deccan Plateau lies SOUTH of the Narmada (Western/Eastern Ghats). Both are part of the ancient Peninsular Plateau.
Q5EASY· Ghats
Where do the Western and Eastern Ghats meet?
Show solution
Step 1 — Location. The Nilgiri Hills (Tamil Nadu/Karnataka/Kerala border) — also called the 'Blue Mountains.' Step 2 — Significance. Where the two Ghats meet creates a region of high biodiversity. The Nilgiris are part of the Western Ghats biodiversity hotspot. ✦ Answer: The Western and Eastern Ghats meet in the Nilgiri Hills (Tamil Nadu/Karnataka/Kerala). The Nilgiris are part of the Western Ghats biodiversity hotspot.
Q6MEDIUM· Plate tectonics
Why is the Himalayan range still rising today?
Show solution
Step 1 — Pre-collision setup. 140 million years ago, India was part of Gondwanaland. About 65 million years ago, the supercontinent broke up and India started drifting NORTHWARD at about 15 cm/year — unusually fast. Step 2 — Collision (~50 million years ago). The Indian Plate crashed into the Eurasian Plate. The Indian Plate, being denser, slid UNDER the Eurasian Plate (subduction). The collision pushed the Eurasian Plate UPWARD — and the Himalayas were born. Step 3 — Why it continues. The Indian Plate is STILL MOVING NORTHWARD at about 5 cm/year. The Eurasian Plate is still being pushed up by this collision. As a result: • The Himalayas are rising at about 5 mm per year. • This makes them YOUNG mountains (young = still being formed). • Earthquakes are frequent — the plates are constantly stressed. Step 4 — Evidence. • Marine fossils found at high altitudes in the Himalayas — indicating the rock was once seafloor that was lifted. • Active fault lines along the Himalayan front cause regular earthquakes. • GPS measurements confirm continuing plate movement. ✦ Answer: The Indian Plate continues to push northward into the Eurasian Plate at ~5 cm/year. This ongoing collision lifts the Himalayas by ~5 mm/year. Marine fossils at high altitudes prove that the rock now mountains was once seafloor — beautifully demonstrating the geological process.
Q7MEDIUM· Northern Plains
Why are the Northern Plains so important economically and demographically?
Show solution
Step 1 — Fertility. The Northern Plains are formed by alluvium deposited by Himalayan rivers (Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra). This alluvial soil is among the most fertile on Earth — replenished annually by river flooding (in the Khadar belt). Step 2 — Wheat and rice production. • Punjab, Haryana, Western UP: India's wheat bowl. • Eastern UP, Bihar, West Bengal: India's rice and jute belt. • Together, the Northern Plains produce ~60% of India's foodgrain. Step 3 — Population density. ~40% of India's population (over 500 million people) live in the Northern Plains. Population density: among the highest in the world (~700 people/sq km in the Ganga Plain). Step 4 — Major cities. Delhi, Lucknow, Kanpur, Patna, Kolkata, Allahabad/Prayagraj, Varanasi — major Indian cities all in the Northern Plains. Step 5 — Historical centrality. Every major Indian civilisation (Indus Valley, Vedic, Mauryan, Gupta, Mughal, Delhi Sultanate) was centred in the Northern Plains. India's political and cultural heart. Step 6 — Transport. Flat terrain enables: extensive railway network, highways, river transport. Easy mobility across the plains. Step 7 — Modern challenges. • Pollution (Ganga, Yamuna). • Groundwater depletion (especially Punjab). • Floods (annual in some areas). • Urban congestion. ✦ Answer: The Northern Plains are India's most economically and demographically important region because they are: (i) extremely fertile (alluvial soil); (ii) India's primary foodgrain producer; (iii) host to ~40% of India's population and most major cities; (iv) historical centre of Indian civilisation; (v) connected by flat terrain enabling extensive transport.
Q8MEDIUM· Plateau
Why is the Peninsular Plateau rich in minerals?
Show solution
Step 1 — Geological age. The Peninsular Plateau is composed of ancient (Precambrian) rocks — among the oldest in the world. These rocks were formed when Earth's interior heat was concentrated near the surface, allowing minerals to crystallise out of magma in concentrated deposits. Step 2 — Mineral types found. • Iron ore — Karnataka (Bellary, Hospet), Odisha (Kendujhar, Sundargarh), Jharkhand. • Coal — Damodar Valley (Jharkhand, West Bengal), Singareni (Telangana). • Bauxite — Jharkhand, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh. • Manganese — Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha. • Copper — Khetri (Rajasthan), Singhbhum (Jharkhand). • Diamond — Madhya Pradesh (Panna), Andhra Pradesh. • Gold — Karnataka (Kolar, Hutti), Bihar. Step 3 — Significance. The Peninsular Plateau hosts ~80% of India's mineral reserves. This is the foundation of Indian industry — iron and steel (Jamshedpur, Bhilai, Rourkela, Durgapur), copper, aluminum production. Step 4 — Distribution patterns. Iron ore + coal are often near each other in the Chota Nagpur Plateau (Jharkhand) — making this region the heart of Indian heavy industry. Step 5 — Economic implications. Mining in the Peninsular Plateau provides: • Industrial raw materials. • Employment for millions. • Foreign exchange (exports). • Also: environmental and social conflicts (displacement of tribal communities, ecological damage). ✦ Answer: The Peninsular Plateau is rich in minerals because its ancient (Precambrian) rocks formed when Earth's interior heat created concentrated mineral deposits. It hosts ~80% of India's mineral reserves — iron ore, coal, bauxite, manganese, copper, etc. — making it the foundation of Indian industry.
Q9MEDIUM· Thar
Why is the Thar Desert located where it is, despite India's tropical climate?
Show solution
Step 1 — Latitude factor. The Thar Desert is at 25-29° N latitude — within the global belt where SUBTROPICAL HIGH-PRESSURE systems descend. Earth's atmosphere has alternating high and low pressure bands at fixed latitudes. Around 30° N, descending air creates dryness — this is why all deserts at 30° N (Sahara, Arabian, Thar) exist. Step 2 — Rain shadow. The Thar is in the RAIN SHADOW of: • The Aravali Mountains to the south. The Aravalis run roughly NE-SW, partially blocking south-westerly monsoon winds blowing toward the desert. • The Himalayas to the north. They block any moisture that might come from the north (Central Asia). Most monsoon rain falls before reaching the Thar — leaving it dry. Step 3 — Distance from sea. Coastal areas receive more rainfall than interior areas. The Thar is in INTERIOR western India, far from the ocean. Marine moisture has been depleted by the time it could reach the Thar. Step 4 — Topography. The flat-to-undulating terrain has nothing to force moist air to rise (which would cause condensation and rain). Without orographic lift, what little moisture reaches the area passes by without raining. Step 5 — Temperature. At 27° N, the Thar gets intense summer heat (often 45-50°C). Hot air can hold more moisture without condensing — making rain even less likely. Step 6 — Result. Annual rainfall in the Thar: 100-200 mm (very dry). Western Rajasthan often gets less than 100 mm in a year. Compare this to coastal Mumbai (~2,200 mm) at similar latitude. ✦ Answer: The Thar Desert exists because: (i) at 25-29° N, descending subtropical high-pressure dries air; (ii) it's in the rain shadow of the Aravali Mountains; (iii) it's far from the sea; (iv) flat terrain doesn't cause moist air to rise and rain; (v) intense summer heat further reduces precipitation. Result: <200 mm annual rainfall — among the driest regions in India.
Q10MEDIUM· Coastal
Compare the Western and Eastern Coastal Plains of India.
Show solution
Step 1 — Location. WESTERN COAST: from Gujarat (north) to Kerala (south). Borders the Arabian Sea. EASTERN COAST: from West Bengal (north) to Tamil Nadu (south). Borders the Bay of Bengal. Step 2 — Width. WESTERN: NARROW (50-100 km wide). The Western Ghats run close to the coast. EASTERN: WIDER (200-300 km wide). Eastern Ghats are further from the coast, leaving more plain. Step 3 — Rivers. WESTERN: Rivers are SHORTER and don't form major deltas (because Western Ghats are close to the coast). Examples: Narmada, Tapi (drain into Arabian Sea); Mandovi, Zuari (Goa). EASTERN: Rivers are LONGER and form LARGE DELTAS. Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri all form deltas in the Bay of Bengal. Step 4 — Backwaters. WESTERN: Backwaters (lagoons connected to the sea) — especially in Kerala. World-famous tourist attractions. EASTERN: Less prominent backwaters; instead, large delta wetlands. Step 5 — Subdivisions. WESTERN: Konkan (Maharashtra, Goa) + Karnataka coast + Malabar (Kerala). EASTERN: Coromandel Coast (Tamil Nadu, S. Andhra) + Northern Circars (N. Andhra, Odisha). Step 6 — Major ports. WESTERN: Mumbai, Mormugao (Goa), Mangalore, Kochi. EASTERN: Chennai, Visakhapatnam, Paradip, Kolkata. Step 7 — Climate. WESTERN: Heavy monsoon rains (Western Ghats trigger orographic rainfall). Konkan: 2500+ mm annual. EASTERN: Moderate to heavy rainfall, mostly during summer monsoon and retreating monsoon. Cyclones from the Bay of Bengal common. ✦ Answer: Western Coast is NARROW with short rivers and famous backwaters (Kerala). Eastern Coast is WIDER with long rivers forming large deltas (Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri). Major ports on both coasts. Western Coast has heavier monsoon rains; Eastern Coast has more cyclone risk.
Q11HARD· Long-form
Compare the Himalayas with the Peninsular Plateau on geological age, formation, mineral resources, and current activity.
Show solution
Step 1 — Geological age. HIMALAYAS: ~50 million years old. YOUNG mountains. Still forming. PENINSULAR PLATEAU: 600+ million years old (Precambrian). ANCIENT. Among the oldest landmasses on Earth. Step 2 — Formation process. HIMALAYAS: Formed by COLLISION between the Indian Plate (drifting northward) and the Eurasian Plate (50 million years ago). Folding and uplift produced the mountains. The collision continues today. PENINSULAR PLATEAU: Originally part of Gondwanaland (supercontinent). Remained intact when Gondwanaland broke up (~65 million years ago). The Indian Plate (with the plateau on top) drifted northward. The plateau itself is composed of metamorphic and igneous rocks — the basement of the Indian subcontinent. Step 3 — Rock types. HIMALAYAS: Mostly SEDIMENTARY rocks (sandstone, shale, limestone) folded and uplifted during the collision. Also some metamorphic rocks (gneiss, schist) at deeper levels. PENINSULAR PLATEAU: Mostly METAMORPHIC and IGNEOUS rocks (gneiss, granite, basalt). Some sedimentary rocks in the Vindhyans. The Deccan Traps in western India are extensive basalt flows from massive volcanic eruptions ~65 million years ago. Step 4 — Mineral resources. HIMALAYAS: Relatively LOW in mineral wealth. Some limestone, gypsum, salt, but not on a major industrial scale. PENINSULAR PLATEAU: VERY RICH in minerals. Contains ~80% of India's mineral reserves: iron ore (Karnataka, Odisha, Jharkhand), coal (Jharkhand, MP, WB), bauxite, manganese, copper, gold, diamond. This is the foundation of Indian industry. Step 5 — Current geological activity. HIMALAYAS: HIGHLY ACTIVE. Earthquakes frequent (Himalayan front is a major seismic zone). Mountains still rising ~5 mm/year. Glacial activity continuing. Landslides common. PENINSULAR PLATEAU: GEOLOGICALLY STABLE (mostly). No major earthquakes typical. Slow weathering and erosion are the dominant processes. The Deccan Traps' volcanic activity ended ~60 million years ago. Step 6 — Human use. HIMALAYAS: Difficult terrain — sparse population, agriculture limited to terraces and valleys. Important for tourism, defence, hydroelectricity, religious pilgrimage. PENINSULAR PLATEAU: Hosts major industrial cities (Jamshedpur, Bhilai, Rourkela). Major agricultural region for black soil crops (cotton). Important for mining, forestry, hydroelectricity, transportation. Step 7 — Ecological significance. HIMALAYAS: Major source of rivers (Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra). Glaciers feed these rivers. Unique alpine ecosystems. Biodiversity hotspot. PENINSULAR PLATEAU: Western Ghats are a biodiversity hotspot. Eastern Ghats less so but still significant. Black soil and laterite soils support distinct ecosystems. Step 8 — Summary table. | Feature | Himalayas | Peninsular Plateau | |---------|-----------|-------------------| | Age | 50 million years | 600+ million years | | Type | Folded mountains | Ancient plateau | | Rocks | Sedimentary | Metamorphic/Igneous | | Active? | Yes (rising, earthquakes) | Stable | | Minerals | Low | Very rich | | Population | Sparse | Heavy (industrial cities) | ✦ Answer: Himalayas are YOUNG (50 mya), formed by plate collision, still rising, low in minerals, high seismic activity. Peninsular Plateau is ANCIENT (600+ mya), formed when Gondwanaland broke up, stable, rich in minerals (80% of India's reserves), hosts most of India's industry. They are geologically opposite — one is birth, the other is geological maturity.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Six physiographic divisions: Himalayas, Northern Plains, Peninsular Plateau, Indian Desert, Coastal Plains, Islands.
  • Plate tectonics: India was part of Gondwanaland; drifted north 15 cm/year; collided with Eurasian Plate 50 million years ago — Himalayas formed.
  • Himalayan ranges (north to south): Himadri (Greater, 6000m+), Himachal (Middle, 3700-4500m), Shivaliks (Lower, 900-1100m).
  • Himalayan regional divisions (west to east): Punjab, Kumaon, Nepal, Assam Himalayas, Purvanchal.
  • Northern Plains subdivisions: Bhabar (pebble belt), Tarai (marshy), Bhangar (older alluvium), Khadar (newer alluvium, most fertile).
  • Peninsular Plateau: Central Highlands (north of Narmada — Aravalis, Vindhyas) + Deccan Plateau (south of Narmada — bounded by Western/Eastern Ghats).
  • Western Ghats (Sahyadri) — continuous, higher; Eastern Ghats — discontinuous, lower. Meet at Nilgiris.
  • Highest peaks bordering India: Everest (8848m, Nepal/China), K2 (8611m, India/Pakistan), Kangchenjunga (8586m, India/Nepal).
  • Indian Desert (Thar): western Rajasthan, ~200,000 sq km. <200 mm rain/year. Rain shadow + subtropical aridity.
  • Coastal Plains: Western Coast (narrow, backwaters, Konkan-Karnataka-Malabar) + Eastern Coast (wider, deltas, Coromandel-Northern Circars).
  • Islands: Andaman & Nicobar (Bay of Bengal, ~572 islands, tropical rainforest, strategic) + Lakshadweep (Arabian Sea, 36 coral islands, off Kerala).
  • Peninsular Plateau hosts ~80% of India's mineral reserves (iron ore, coal, bauxite, manganese, copper).
  • Northern Plains host ~40% of India's population and are India's primary food bowl.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-7 marks per board paper (1-2 short + 1 long question)

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / Very Short11-2Identify physiographic divisions; ranges; peaks
Short Answer31Difference between Himalayas and Peninsular Plateau
Long Answer50-1Six physiographic divisions in detail
Map-based50-1Locate ranges, peaks, ghats, deserts, plateaus
Prep strategy
  • Memorise SIX physiographic divisions: Himalayas + Northern Plains + Peninsular Plateau + Indian Desert + Coastal Plains + Islands
  • THREE Himalayan ranges (Himadri, Himachal, Shivaliks) and FIVE regional divisions
  • FOUR Northern Plains subdivisions: Bhabar, Tarai, Bhangar, Khadar
  • Western Ghats vs Eastern Ghats; meeting at Nilgiri Hills
  • Highest peaks: Everest, K2, Kangchenjunga
  • Map work: ranges, peaks, ghats, deserts, plateaus, coasts

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Hydroelectricity

Himalayan and Western Ghats rivers generate ~50% of India's hydroelectric power. Major dams: Bhakra Nangal, Tehri, Sardar Sarovar, Hirakud.

Iron and steel industry

Concentrated in the Peninsular Plateau where iron ore and coal are both available. Jamshedpur (Tata Steel), Bhilai, Bokaro, Rourkela, Durgapur.

Tourism

Different physiographic regions support different tourism: Himalayan adventure (Manali, Leh, Sikkim), beach tourism (Goa, Kerala), backwaters (Kerala), Thar Desert (Jaisalmer, Pushkar), islands (Andaman).

Climate adaptation

Climate change affects each region differently: glacial retreat in Himalayas affects rivers; sea-level rise threatens coastal cities (Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata); desertification expansion in Thar.

Defense strategy

India's defense planning is shaped by physical geography: Himalayan border with China/Pakistan; coastal defense for major cities; Andaman & Nicobar strategic position.

Renewable energy

Different regions favor different sources: Thar Desert (solar), coastal areas (wind), Himalayas (hydroelectric). India has set ambitious 2030 renewable energy targets.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Memorise THE SIX physiographic divisions in order. Common 1-mark question.
  2. Memorise THE THREE Himalayan ranges (Himadri, Himachal, Shivaliks) — and the FIVE regional divisions (Punjab, Kumaon, Nepal, Assam Himalayas, Purvanchal).
  3. Memorise THE FOUR subdivisions of the Northern Plains: Bhabar (pebble belt), Tarai (marshy), Bhangar (older), Khadar (newer, most fertile).
  4. For 'difference between' questions, use a 4-row comparison table. CBSE awards marks for organisation as much as content.
  5. Know KEY PEAKS: Everest (8848m, Nepal/China), K2 (8611m, India/Pakistan), Kangchenjunga (8586m, India/Nepal).
  6. Know KEY RIVERS dividing regions: Narmada (divides Central Highlands from Deccan); Sutlej, Kali, Tista (divide Himalayan regions).
  7. Map work practice: identify Himalayan peaks, Western/Eastern Ghats, major ports, islands. Common 5-mark map question.
  8. Remember: Thar Desert = WESTERN Rajasthan (and small parts of Gujarat/Pakistan). Lakshadweep = ARABIAN SEA. Andaman & Nicobar = BAY OF BENGAL.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Plate tectonics in detail: subduction zones, transform faults, ocean ridges, hotspot volcanism. Understanding the Earth's interior dynamics.
  • Indian Plate movement: at 5 cm/year, what's the future of the Himalayas? When will they stop rising? Modern geological research.
  • Deccan Traps: massive volcanic eruptions 65 million years ago that may have contributed to mass extinction of dinosaurs. Some of the largest lava flows in Earth's history.
  • Comparing the Aravalis (ancient, eroded) with the Himalayas (young, active) — how do we date mountains? Radiometric dating, structural geology.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

NTSE / NMMSVery high — physiographic divisions are core MCQs
Olympiad (Social Studies)High — plate tectonics and mountain formation are foundation topics
UPSC FoundationVery high — Indian Geography is core to UPSC
CLAT / Legal FoundationLow — limited geographic content

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

The Himalayas are a vast mountain system that includes several sub-ranges. The Karakoram is one of them (in Pakistan and Indian-administered Kashmir). The Hindu Kush is another. When we say 'Himalayas,' we mean the entire system including these sub-ranges.

The Aravalis are very ancient — about 2.5 billion years old! Over time, weathering and erosion have worn them down. The Himalayas, in contrast, are only 50 million years old — relatively new and still tall.

Rivers on the east (Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri) are LONG and flow gently across the wide Eastern Coastal Plain — slowing down enough to deposit sediment as deltas. Rivers on the west are SHORT and flow steeply (Western Ghats are close to the coast), so they don't have time to slow and deposit. Result: deltas mainly in the east.

They control the approach to the Strait of Malacca — a critical chokepoint for shipping between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific. Most of East Asia's oil imports pass through this strait. India's Andaman & Nicobar Command monitors this region. China's growing presence in the Indian Ocean makes this strategic importance increasingly relevant.

About 5 mm per year — a few centimetres per generation. Over millennia, this adds up. The Indian Plate is still pushing northward at ~5 cm/year (faster than most plates), and this pressure continues to lift the Himalayas. Earthquakes along the Himalayan front (Nepal 2015, Sikkim 2011) are reminders of this active geology.

Topography. The Aravali Mountains lie BETWEEN Rajasthan (Thar) and the Punjab plains. Punjab gets monsoon rain from south-west winds, which lift over the plains and bring rain. The Aravalis partially block these winds from reaching the Thar — leaving the Thar dry. Two adjacent regions have completely different climates because of one mountain range.
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Last reviewed on 18 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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