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Alluvial Soil






📌 Topic 01 of 6 · Chapter 04 · Soils of India

Alluvial Soil of India

Types (Khadar, Bangar), distribution, crops grown — complete notes for UPSC & PSC exams.

🌱 Alluvial Soil — Overview

Alluvial soil is the most widespread and agriculturally important soil in India. It covers about 43% of India’s total land area and is found mainly in the Indo-Gangetic Plain and river deltas.

FeatureDetails
FormationDeposited by rivers (Ganga, Indus, Brahmaputra and their tributaries)
Area covered~43% of India’s land area — largest soil group
DistributionIndo-Gangetic Plain (UP, Bihar, Punjab, Haryana, WB), river deltas (Godavari, Krishna, Cauvery), coastal plains
TextureSandy loam to clay; varies with distance from river
ColourLight grey to ash grey
FertilityVery fertile — rich in potash, phosphoric acid, lime; deficient in nitrogen and humus
pHSlightly alkaline to neutral

🌱 Types of Alluvial Soil

TypeLocationCharacteristics
Khadar (New Alluvium)Flood plains — near rivers; low-lying areasNewer deposits; finer texture; more fertile; renewed annually by floods; lighter in colour
Bangar (Old Alluvium)Upland areas — away from rivers; terracesOlder deposits; coarser texture; less fertile; contains kankar (calcium carbonate nodules); darker

🌾 Crops Grown in Alluvial Soil

  • Kharif crops: Rice, maize, cotton, sugarcane, jute
  • Rabi crops: Wheat, barley, mustard, peas, gram
  • Alluvial soil supports the highest agricultural productivity in India
  • The Indo-Gangetic Plain is called the “Granary of India” — wheat and rice bowl
⭐ Key Facts — Alluvial Soil:
Most widespread soil in India = 43% of land area
Most fertile soil — supports dense population
Khadar = new alluvium = near rivers = more fertile
Bangar = old alluvium = upland = has kankar nodules
Deficient in: Nitrogen, humus, phosphorus
Rich in: Potash, lime, phosphoric acid