Concepts

Indo-Gangetic Plain (Northern Plains)

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectGeography

Definition

The vast, flat, fertile alluvial lowland of northern India formed by the deposition of sediment by the Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra river systems between the Himalayas and the Peninsular plateau.

Key points

  • Built up over millions of years by alluvium deposited by three river systems (Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra) in the foredeep (a structural trough) in front of the rising Himalayas.
  • Extremely level and fertile, one of the most intensively farmed and densely populated regions in the world; the heartland of Indian agriculture and population.
  • Divided north to south into relief belts: bhabar (porous gravel piedmont where streams sink), terai (marshy, re-emerged water belt), bhangar (older alluvium with kankar), and khadar (newer flood-plain alluvium).
  • Provides easy transport, large groundwater reserves, and rich farmland; it supports wheat, rice, and sugarcane and a huge population.
  • Stretches across Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, and the Brahmaputra valley of Assam.

Why it matters for CAPF

The three-river origin, the bhabar-terai-bhangar-khadar belts, the fertility and dense population, and the spread across northern States are recurring physiography and agriculture facts.

Common confusion

The relief belts run in order from the hills outward: bhabar (gravelly, streams disappear), terai (marshy, streams re-emerge), then bhangar (older) and khadar (newer) alluvium. The plain is depositional, formed by rivers, not by folding or faulting.

One-line recall

Flat fertile alluvial plain of the Indus-Ganga-Brahmaputra; relief belts bhabar, terai, bhangar, khadar; India's agricultural and population heartland.

Parent note

india physiography

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