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Features of the Peninsular Plateau 

  • Roughly triangular in shape with its base coinciding with the southern edge of the great plain of North India. Apex of the triangular plateau is at Kanniyakumari.
  • It covers a total area of about 16 lakh sq km (India as a whole is 32 lakh sq km).
  • The average height of the plateau is 600-900 m above sea level (varies from region to region).
  • Most of the peninsular rivers flow west to east indicating it’s general slope.
  • Narmada-Tapti are the exceptions which flow from east to west in a rift (rift is caused by divergent boundary (Go back to Interaction of plates).
  • The Peninsular Plateau is a one of the oldest landforms of earth.
  • It is a highly stable block composed mostly of the Archaean gneisses and schists {Rock System}.
  • It has been a stable shield which has gone through little structural changes since its formation.
  • Since few hundred million years, Peninsular block has been a land area and has never been submerged beneath the sea except in a few places.
  • Peninsular Plateau is an aggregation of several smaller plateaus, hill ranges interspersed with river basins and valleys.

Minor Plateaus in the Peninsular Plateau
Marwar Plateau or Mewar Plateau

  • It is the plateau of eastern Rajasthan. [Marwar plain is to the west of Aravalis whereas Marwar plateau is to the east].
  • The average elevation is 250-500 m above sea level and it slopes down eastwards.
  • It is made up of sandstone, shales and limestones of the Vindhayan period.
  • The Banas river, along with its tributaries [Berach river, Khari rivers] originate in the Aravali Range and flow towards northwest into Chambal river. The erosional activity of these rives make the plateau top appear like a rolling plain.

[Rolling Plain: ‘Rolling plains’ are not completely flat: there are slight rises and fall in the land form. Ex: Prairies of USA] 

Central Highland

  • Also called the Madhya Bharat Pathar or Madhya Bharat Plateau.
  • It is to the east of the Marwar or Mewar Upland.
  • Most of plateau comprises the basin of the Chambal river which flows in a rift valley.
  • The Kali Sindh, flowing from Rana Prataph Sagar, The Banas flowing through Mewar plateau and The Parwan and the Parbati flowing from Madhya Pradesh are its main tributaries.
  • It is a rolling plateau with rounded hills composed of sandstone. Thick forests grow here.
  • To the north are the ravines or badlands of the Chambal river [They are typical to Chambal river basin]{ Arid landforms}.

Bundelkhand Upland

  • Yamuna river to the north, Madhya Bharat Pathar to the west, Vindhyan Scarplands to the east and south-east and Malwa Plateau to the south.
  • It is the old dissected (divided by a number of deep valleys) upland of the ‘Bundelkhand gneiss’ comprising of granite and gneiss.
  • Spreads over five districts of Uttar Pradesh and four districts of Madhya Pradesh.
  • Average elevation of 300-600 m above sea level, this area slopes down from the Vindhyan Scarp toward the Yamuna River.
  • The area is marked by a chain of hillocks (small hill) made of granite and sandstone.
  • The erosional work of the rivers flowing here have converted it into an undulating (wave like surface) area and rendered it unfit for cultivation.
  • The region is characterized by senile (characteristic of or caused by old age) topography.
  • Streams like Betwa, Dhasan and Ken flow through the plateau.

Malwa Plateau

  • The Malwa Plateau roughly forms a triangle based on the Vindhyan Hills, bounded by the Aravali Range in the west and Madhya Bharat Pathar to the north and Bundelkhand to the east.
  • This plateau has two systems of drainage; one towards the Arabian sea (The Narmada, the Tapi and the Mahi), and the other towards the Bay of Bengal (Chambal and Betwa, joining the Yamuna).
  • In the north it is drained by the Chambal and many of its right bank tributaries like the Kali, the Sindh and the Parbati. It also includes the upper courses of the Sindh, the Ken and the Betwa.
  • It is composed of extensive lava flow and is covered with black soils.
  • The general slope is towards the north [decreases from 600 m in the south to less than 500 m in the north]
  • This is a rolling plateau dissected by rivers. In the north, the plateau is marked by the Chambal ravines.

Baghelkhand

  • North of the Maikal Range is the Baghelkhand.
  • Made of limestones and sandstones on the west and granite in the east.
  • It is bounded by the Son river on the north.
  • The central part of the plateau acts as a water divide between the Son drainage system in the north and the Mahanadi river system in the south.
  • The region is uneven with general elevation varying from 150 m to 1,200 m.
  • The Bhanrer and Kaimur are located close to the trough-axis.
  • The general horizontality of the strata shows that this area has not undergone any major disturbance.

Chotanagpur Plateau

  • Chotanagpur plateau represents the north-eastern projection of the Indian Peninsula.
  • Mostly in Jharkhand, northern part of Chhatisgarh and Purulia district of West Bengal.
  • The Son river flows in the north-west of the plateau and joins the Ganga.
  • The average elevation of the plateau is 700 m above sea level.
  • This plateau is composed mainly of Gondwana rocks.
  • The plateau is drained by numerous rivers and streams in different directions and presents a radial drainage pattern. {Drainage Pattern}
  • Rivers like the Damodar, the Subarnrekaha, the North Koel, the South Koel and the Barkar have developed extensive drainage basins.
  • The Damodar river flows through the middle of this region in a rift valley from west to east. Here are found the Gondwana coal fields which provide bulk of coal in India.
  • North of the Damodar river is the Hazaribagh plateau with an average elevation of 600 m above mean sea level. This plateau has isolated hills. It looks like a peneplain due to large scale erosion.
  • The Ranchi Plateau to the south of the Damodar Valley rises to about 600 m above mean sea level. Most of the surface is rolling where the city of Ranchi (661 m) is located.
  • At places it is interruped by monadnocks (an isolated hill or ridge of erosion-resistant rock rising above a peneplain. Ex: Ayers Rock in Australia) and conical hills.
  • The Rajmahal Hills forming the north eastern edge of the Chotanagpur Plateau are mostly made of basalt and are covered by lava flows {Basaltic Lava}.
  • They run in north-south direction and rise to average elevation of 400 m (highest mount is 567 m). These hills have been dissected into separate plateaus.

Meghalaya Plateau

  • The peninsular plateau extends further east beyond the Rajmahal hills to from Meghalaya or the Shillong plateau.
  • Garo-Rajmahal Gap separates this plateau from the main block.
  • This gap was formed by down-faulting (normal fault: a block of earth slides downwards). It was later filled by sediments deposited by the Ganga and Brahmaputa.
  • The plateau is formed by Archaean quartzites, shales and schists.
  • The plateau slopes down to Brahmaputra valley in the north and the Surma and Meghna valleys in the south.
  • Its western boundary more or less coincides with the Bangladesh border.
  • The western, central and the eastern parts of the plateau are known as the Garo Hills (900 m), the Khasi-Jaintia Hills (1,500 m) and the Mikir Hills (700 m).
  • Shillong (1,961 m) is the highest point of the plateau.

Deccan Plateau

  • It covers an area of about five lakh sq km.
  • It is triangular in shape and is bounded by the Satpura and the Vindhya in the north-west, the Mahadev and the Maikal in the north, the Western Ghats in the west and the Eastern Ghats in the east.
  • Its average elevation is 600 m.
  • It rises to 1000 m in the south but dips to 500 m in the north.
  • Its general slope is from west to east which is indicated by the flow of its major rivers.
  • Rivers have further subdivided this plateau into a number of smaller plateaus.

Maharashtra Plateau

  • The Maharashtra Plateau lies in Maharashtra.
  • It forms the northern part of the Deccan Plateau.
  • Much of the region is underlain by basaltic rocks of lava origin [Most of the Deccan Traps lies in this region].
  • The area looks like a rolling plain due to weathering.
  • The horizontal lava sheets have led to the formation of typical Deccan Trap topography [step like].
  • The broad and shallow valleys of the Godavari, the Bhima and the Krishna are flanked [bordered on the opposite sides] by flat-topped steep sided hills and ridges.
  • The entire area is covered by black cotton soil known as regur.

Karnataka Plateau

  • The Karnataka Plateau is also known as the Mysore plateau.
  • Lies to the south of the Maharashtra plateau.
  • The area looks like a rolling plateau with an average elevation of 600-900 m.
  • It is highly dissected by numerous rivers rising from the Western Ghats.
  • The general trend of the hills is either parallel to the Western Ghats or across it.
  • The highest peak (1913 m) is at Mulangiri in Baba Budan Hills in Chikmaglur district.
  • The plateau is divided into two parts called Malnad and Maidan.
  • The Malnad in Kannada means hill country. It is dissected into deep valleys covered with dense forests.
  • The Maidan on the other hand is formed of rolling plain with low granite hills.
  • The plateau tapers between the Western Ghats and the Eastern Ghats in the south and merges with the Niligiri hills there.

Telangana plateau

  • The Telangana plateau consists of Archaean gneisses.
  • It’s average elevation is 500-600 m.
  • The southern part is higher than its northern counterpart.
  • The region is drained by three river systems, the Godavari, the Krishna and the Penneru.
  • The entire plateau is divided into Ghats and the Peneplains (a vast featureless, undulating plain which the last stage of deposition process).

Chhattisgarh Plain

  • The Chhattisgarh plain is the only plain worth the name in the Peninsular plateau.
  • It is a saucer shaped depression drained by the upper Mahanadi.
  • The whole basin lies between the Maikala Range and the Odisha hills.
  • The region was once ruled by Haithaivanshi Rajputs from whose thirty six forts (Chhattisgarh) it derives its name.
  • The basin is laid with nearly horizontal beds of limestone and shales.
  • The general elevation of the plain ranges from 250 m in the east to 330 m in the west.
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