Indian
Geography
Physical
Features
India,
with
an
area
if 3.3
million
Sq.
Km, is
a
subcontinent.
The
peninsula
is
separated
from
mainland
Asian
by the
Himalayas.
The
country
lies
between
80 4'
and
3706'
north
of the
equator
and
surrounded
by the
Bay of
Bengal
in the
east,
the
Arabian
Sea in
the
west
and
the
Indian
Ocean
to the
south.
The
Himalayas
from
the
highest
mountain
ranges
in the
world,
extending
2,500km
over
northern
India.
Bounded
by the
Indus
river
in the
west
and
the
Brahamputra
in the
east,
the
three
parallel
ranges,
the
Himadri,
Himachal
and
Shivaliks
have
deep
canyons
gorged
by the
following
the
rivers
into
the
Gangetic
plain.
River
Systems
The
rivers
may be
classified
as
following:
a) the
Himalayan,
b) The
Deccan,
c) the
coastal
and
d) the
rivers
of
inland
drainage
basin.
The
Himalayan
rivers
are
generally
a now
fed
and
flow
throughout
the
year.
During
the
monsoon
months
(June
to
September),
the
Himalayas
receive
very
heavy
rainfall
and
the
rivers
carry
the
maximum
amount
of
water,
causing
frequent
floods
The
Decan
rivers
are
generally
rain-fed
and,
therefore,
fluctuate
greatly
in
volume.
A very
large
no of
them
are
non-perennial.
The
coastal
rivers,
especially
on the
west
coast,
are
short
and
have
limited
catchment
areas,
Most
of
these
are
non-perennial
as
well.
The
rivers
on the
inland
drainage
basin
are
few
and
ephemeral.
They
like
the
Saimber
or are
lost
in the
sands,
having
no
outlet
to the
sea.
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