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Northern Plains β€” Formation & Features






πŸ“Œ Topic 03 of 6 Β· Chapter 01 Β· Location & Physiography

Northern Plains β€” Formation & Features

Formation by Himalayan rivers, Bhabar, Terai, Bhangar, Khadar zones; significance for agriculture and population.

🌾 Northern Plains β€” Overview

The Northern Plains (also called the Indo-Gangetic Plain or Great Plains of India) are formed by the alluvial deposits of three major river systems β€” Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra. They extend for about 2,400 km from west to east and are about 240–320 km wide.

  • Area: ~7 lakh sq km
  • Formation: Alluvial deposits from Himalayan rivers over millions of years
  • Depth of alluvium: 1,000–2,000 metres deep
  • Most densely populated region of India
  • Most fertile agricultural land in India

πŸ“Š Zones of the Northern Plains (North to South)

ZoneLocationFeaturesSignificance
BhabarNarrow belt at foothills of HimalayasPorous, coarse alluvium; rivers disappear underground; width 8–16 kmNot suitable for agriculture; forests; rivers reappear as springs
TeraiSouth of BhabarWet, marshy, forested; rivers reappear; fine alluvium; width 15–30 kmDense forests; wildlife; after clearing β€” fertile agricultural land
BhangarOlder alluvial plain (higher ground)Old alluvium; contains Kankar (calcium carbonate nodules); less fertileOlder settlements; less productive than Khadar
KhadarNewer alluvial plain (flood plains)New alluvium; renewed every year by floods; very fertile; no KankarMost fertile; best for agriculture; rice, wheat, sugarcane
⭐ Key Difference β€” Bhangar vs Khadar:

β€’ Bhangar = older alluvium = higher ground = contains Kankar = less fertile

β€’ Khadar = newer alluvium = flood plains = renewed annually = most fertile

β€’ Bhabar = rivers disappear underground (porous gravel)

β€’ Terai = rivers reappear as springs = marshy = dense forests

πŸ—ΊοΈ Regional Divisions of Northern Plains

RegionStatesKey Features
Punjab PlainPunjab, HaryanaDoabs (land between two rivers); 5 rivers of Punjab; wheat bowl of India
Ganga PlainUP, Bihar, WBLargest part; most fertile; rice-wheat cultivation; most densely populated
Brahmaputra PlainAssamEastern part; Brahmaputra river; floods annually; tea gardens
Rajasthan PlainRajasthanWestern part; Thar Desert; Luni river; arid

🌾 Significance of Northern Plains

  • Agriculture: Most fertile land; produces majority of India’s food grains
  • Population: Most densely populated region; ~40% of India’s population
  • Flat terrain: Easy to build roads, railways, cities
  • Perennial rivers: Year-round water supply for irrigation
  • Historical: Cradle of Indian civilisation; most ancient cities
πŸ“ Exam Tip:
β€’ Doab = land between two rivers (e.g., Ganga-Yamuna Doab)
β€’ Kankar = calcium carbonate nodules found in Bhangar
β€’ Terai = marshy zone south of Bhabar; rivers reappear
β€’ Northern Plains = alluvial deposits = 1,000-2,000m deep
β€’ Khadar = most fertile = renewed by annual floods