India is like a giant scrapbook of landforms — towering snowy mountains, flat fertile plains, an ancient rocky plateau, sun-baked deserts and sparkling coasts — all stitched together by the slow drama of moving continents.
🏔️ The Himalayas
Young, lofty, folded mountains in the north — India’s natural wall.
🌾 Northern Plains
Flat, fertile land built by the Indus, Ganga and Brahmaputra rivers.
🪨 Peninsular Plateau
The oldest, hardest landmass — rich in minerals and black soil.
🏜️ Desert, Coasts & Islands
The Thar Desert, two long coastal plains and scattered island groups.
1. How were these landforms formed? (Plate Tectonics)
The Earth’s crust is broken into seven major and many minor tectonic plates that float on the soft mantle below and keep moving slowly. The theory that explains this movement is called Plate Tectonics. Long ago, all continents formed one giant landmass called Pangaea, surrounded by a single ocean called Panthalassa. Pangaea later split into two parts — Laurasia in the north and Gondwanaland in the south. The Indian landmass was once part of Gondwanaland. As the Indian Plate drifted northward and collided with the much larger Eurasian Plate, the sediments lying in the shallow Tethys Sea between them were squeezed, crumpled and pushed upward. This crumpling created the fold mountains we call the Himalayas. The Northern Plains were later formed by deposits filling the depression between the Himalayas and the plateau. This is why India has such a striking variety of physical features.
2. The Himalayan Mountains
The Himalayas are geologically young, weak and flexible fold mountains. They stretch about 2,400 km from the Indus river in the west to the Brahmaputra in the east, forming an arc. Their width varies from 400 km in Kashmir to 150 km in Arunachal Pradesh. The Himalayas run in three almost parallel ranges:
(a) The Great or Inner Himalayas (Himadri): the northernmost and most continuous range, with the loftiest peaks averaging 6,000 m. It contains the world’s highest peaks like Mount Everest (Kanchenjunga in India) and is the core of the Himalayan system. The folds here are asymmetrical and the range is perennially snow-bound with many glaciers.
(b) The Lesser Himalayas (Himachal): lying south of the Himadri, this range is the most rugged, with altitudes between 3,700 m and 4,500 m. It contains famous ranges like the Pir Panjal, Dhauladhar and Mahabharat, and beautiful valleys such as Kashmir, Kangra and Kullu. Popular hill stations like Shimla, Mussoorie and Darjeeling are found here.
(c) The Shiwaliks (Outer Himalayas): the outermost and lowest range (900–1,100 m), formed of unconsolidated sediments brought down by rivers. The longitudinal valleys lying between the Lesser Himalayas and the Shiwaliks are called Duns, for example Dehra Dun, Kotli Dun and Patli Dun. Going from west to east, the Himalayas are also divided regionally into the Punjab Himalaya, Kumaon Himalaya, Nepal Himalaya and Assam Himalaya. The part of the eastern Himalayas that bends sharply southward is called the Purvanchal (Patkai, Naga, Manipur and Mizo hills).
3. The Northern Plains
The Northern Plains were formed by the deposition of alluvium (fine soil) by three major river systems — the Indus, the Ganga and the Brahmaputra — along with their tributaries. Spread over about 7 lakh sq km, the plain is roughly 2,400 km long and 240 to 320 km broad. It is one of the most densely populated and agriculturally productive regions on Earth because of its rich soil, plenty of water and a mild climate. The rivers in their lower course slow down and deposit material, forming distributaries and finally a delta. The Northern Plain is divided into three sections — the Punjab Plains (Indus and tributaries), the Ganga Plains (the largest, from Punjab to West Bengal), and the Brahmaputra Plains in Assam.
According to relief features, the plains have four divisions. The Bhabar is a narrow belt of pebbles deposited where rivers leave the mountains; streams disappear in this belt. South of it lies the Tarai, a wet, marshy and once-forested region where streams reappear. Beyond the Tarai lies the older alluvium called Bhangar, which has a layer of calcareous deposits called kankar. The newer, younger alluvium of the floodplains is called Khadar, which is renewed almost every year and is very fertile.
4. The Peninsular Plateau
The Peninsular Plateau is a tableland composed of old crystalline, igneous and metamorphic rocks. It is part of the ancient Gondwanaland and is therefore the oldest landmass of India. It has broad, shallow valleys and rounded hills. The plateau has two broad divisions: the Central Highlands lying north of the Narmada river (covering the Malwa plateau and bounded by the Aravalis and Vindhyas), and the Deccan Plateau to the south, a triangular landmass bordered by the Western Ghats and Eastern Ghats. The Western Ghats (Sahyadris) are higher (900–1,600 m), continuous and receive heavy rainfall; they can be crossed only through passes. The Eastern Ghats are lower, broken and dissected by rivers draining into the Bay of Bengal. The northwestern part of the plateau is made of black lava soil known as the Deccan Trap. This region is extremely rich in minerals.
5. The Indian Desert, Coastal Plains and Islands
The Indian (Thar) Desert lies to the west of the Aravali Hills. It is an undulating, sandy plain with low rainfall (below 150 mm a year), an arid climate and low vegetation. Barchans (crescent-shaped sand dunes) cover large areas. The only large river here is the Luni. Along the edges of the Peninsular Plateau lie the Coastal Plains. The Western Coastal Plain is narrow and lies between the Western Ghats and the Arabian Sea, divided into the Konkan, Kannad and Malabar coasts. The Eastern Coastal Plain is broad and level, called the Northern Circar in the north and the Coromandel Coast in the south; large rivers like the Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri form fertile deltas here. India also has two groups of islands: the Lakshadweep Islands in the Arabian Sea (small coral islands) and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal (bigger, volcanic and far more numerous).
- The Himalayas extend about 2,400 km and the Northern Plains are about 2,400 km long too.
- Three Himalayan ranges (north to south): Himadri → Himachal → Shiwaliks.
- India once lay in Gondwanaland; the ocean between the plates was the Tethys Sea.
- Four soil/relief belts of the plains: Bhabar, Tarai, Bhangar, Khadar.
- The Peninsular Plateau is the oldest landmass; Western Ghats (900–1,600 m) are higher than the Eastern Ghats.
- Two island groups: Lakshadweep (coral, Arabian Sea) and Andaman & Nicobar (volcanic, Bay of Bengal).
Distinguish between Bhangar and Khadar. (3 marks)
- State what each term means in one clear line.
- Give the key point of difference (age of alluvium).
- Add one extra feature for each to earn full marks.
“The Himalayas play an important role in the life of the people of India.” Explain. (5 marks)
- Open with a one-line statement agreeing with the claim.
- List the roles point by point — climate, rivers, defence, soil, tourism.
- Close with a short concluding sentence.
Remember the Himalayan ranges from north to south with “Hi-Hi-Shi” = Himadri (highest), Himachal (middle), Shiwaliks (smallest). And for the relief belts of the plains, go top to bottom: Bhabar → Tarai → Bhangar → Khadar = “Big Tigers Bring Khana.”
The most common mistake is mixing up the Western and Eastern Ghats. Remember: the Western Ghats are higher, continuous and crossed only by passes; the Eastern Ghats are lower, broken and cut by big rivers. Also do not confuse Bhabar (pebbly belt where streams vanish) with Tarai (marshy belt where they reappear) — many students reverse them.
Q1. What are tectonic plates, and how did the movement of the Indian Plate create the Himalayas?
Answer: Tectonic plates are large, rigid sections of the Earth’s crust that float and move slowly over the soft, molten mantle beneath them. Originally India was part of the southern supercontinent Gondwanaland. As the Indian Plate drifted northward, it collided with the larger Eurasian Plate. The sediments lying in the shallow Tethys Sea between the two plates were squeezed and folded upward by the pressure of the collision. This folding raised the sediments into high fold mountains, which we now call the Himalayas. Because this happened relatively recently in geological time, the Himalayas are called young fold mountains.
Q2. Describe the three parallel ranges of the Himalayas.
Answer: The Himalayas consist of three almost parallel ranges. (1) The Himadri (Great Himalayas) is the northernmost, most continuous and highest range, with peaks averaging 6,000 m, including Mount Everest and Kanchenjunga; it is permanently snow-covered with many glaciers. (2) The Himachal (Lesser Himalayas) lies to its south, is the most rugged range (3,700–4,500 m) and contains famous ranges like the Pir Panjal and Dhauladhar and valleys like Kashmir and Kullu. (3) The Shiwaliks (Outer Himalayas) are the lowest and outermost range (900–1,100 m), made of loose sediments; the valleys between the Lesser Himalayas and Shiwaliks are called Duns, such as Dehra Dun.
Q3. Why are the Northern Plains so important for India, and how were they formed?
Answer: The Northern Plains were formed by the deposition of alluvium brought down by three great river systems — the Indus, the Ganga and the Brahmaputra — along with their tributaries over millions of years. They cover about 7 lakh sq km and stretch around 2,400 km. They are important because the alluvial soil is extremely fertile, water is available in plenty, and the level land makes irrigation, farming, building roads and railways easy. As a result, the plains support intensive agriculture and are among the most densely populated regions in the world, earning the name “the granary of India.”
Q4. Compare the two groups of Indian islands and the two coastal plains.
Answer: India has two island groups. The Lakshadweep Islands lie in the Arabian Sea; they are small coral islands. The Andaman and Nicobar Islands lie in the Bay of Bengal; they are bigger, more numerous and of volcanic origin. India also has two coastal plains. The Western Coastal Plain is narrow and lies between the Western Ghats and the Arabian Sea (Konkan, Kannad and Malabar coasts). The Eastern Coastal Plain is broad and level, lies along the Bay of Bengal (Northern Circar and Coromandel coasts) and has wide, fertile deltas formed by rivers like the Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri.
- ✅ India’s landforms were shaped by moving tectonic plates and the breakup of Pangaea/Gondwanaland.
- ✅ Himalayas (north to south): Himadri, Himachal, Shiwaliks; eastern bend = Purvanchal.
- ✅ Northern Plains = fertile alluvium from Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra; belts = Bhabar, Tarai, Bhangar, Khadar.
- ✅ Peninsular Plateau is the oldest landmass; Central Highlands + Deccan Plateau, bordered by Western and Eastern Ghats.
- ✅ Thar Desert (west), narrow Western and broad Eastern coastal plains, plus Lakshadweep and Andaman & Nicobar islands.
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