Showing posts with label Himalaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Himalaya. Show all posts

Friday, December 31, 2021

Divisions of Himalayas, The Northern Mountains


Snow-capped Great Himalaya (Photo: Himachal Pradesh government tourism department)

Prabhash K Dutta

Geographically, the entire Himalayan region can be divided into three:

i.        The Himalayan ranges

ii.        The trans-Himalayan ranges

iii.       The Eastern hill

The Himalayan ranges

The Himalayan ranges are not a single chain but a series of more or less parallel or converging ranges. The ranges are separated by deep-cut valleys. As in all young fold mountains, the Himalayas are a densely dissected ridge-and-valley topography. Normally, the Himalayas are divided into three chains

a.  The Great Himalaya — Himadri

b.  The Middle Himalaya — Himachal

c.  The Siwalik

The Great Himalaya is the northern-most and loftiest range. It is about 2,400 km-long running from the Nanga Parvat in the west to the Namcha Barwa in the east, where it bends abruptly. It is made up of central crystalline rocks — granite and gneiss. The folds in this range are asymmetrical having steep slope southwards and obscurantly merges with the edges of the Tibetan Plateau.

The Great Himalaya boasts of the tallest peaks of the world such as the Mt Everest (and its ancillary peaks), Kanchenjunga, Makalu, Dhaulagiri, Annapurna Devi etc. Even the passes available in the Great Himalaya range are at such great heights that they are very difficult to cross.

 

A pass in Great Himalaya (Photo: Ministry of Culture, GOI)

Some of the famous passes are Burzil and Zoji La in Jammu and Kashmir, Bara Lach La and Shipki La in Himachal Pradesh, Lipu Lekh, Niti Lal and Thaga La in Uttarakhand, Jelep La and Nathu La in Sikkim. Shipki La and Jelep La provide good connectivity between India and Tibet.

The Lesser Himalaya

The Lesser Himalaya range or the Middle Himalaya runs almost parallel to the Greater Himalaya. It is more amicable and attracts more people.. It consists of a few individual mountain ranges such as the Pir Panjal, the Dhaulaldhar, the Mussoorie, the Naga Tibba and the Mahabharata Lekh. Of these, the Pir Panjal is the longest range running from River Jhelum to upper Beas for a distance of 300-400 km.

Pir Panjal range is separated from the Zaskar range by the Valley of Kashmir. Its elevation is 5,000 metres and more, and contains mostly volcanic peaks. Pir Panjal, Bidil, Gopalghar and Banihal passes are important gaps in the range. The Jammu-Srinagar highway passes through the Banihal pass.

South-east of Ravi, the Pir Panjal range is continued by the Dhauladhar range passing through Dalhousie, Dharamshala and Shimla. This range attains elevation higher than 4,000 metres.

Further east are situated the Mussoorie and the Nag Tibba ranges. The Mussoourie range has an average elevation of less than 3,000 metres, and runs from Mussoorie to Lansdowne for about 120 km. Mussoorie, Nainital, Chakrata and Ranikhet are important hill stations on the Mussoorie range.

Great Himalaya (Photo: HP Tourism)
The Mahabharata Lekh range is in Nepal. Crossing Nepal, Sikkim and Bhutan, the Lesser Himalaya marks its presence in Arunachal Pradesh. The Lesser Himalayan topography has some beautiful valleys such as the Kashmir Valley, Kangra Valley and Kulu Valley. 

The Kashmir Valley is supposed to have been occupied by a lake during Pleistocene but later an uplift and sedimentation did away with the lakh. It is generally believed to be a synclinal valley which is floor3ed with a variety of alluvial deposits, lacustrine [relating to or associated with lakes] fluvial and fluvo-glacial depositis. River Jhelum meanders through it majestically.

The Kangra Valley is a strike valley, and runs from the foot of the Dhauladhar range to the south of the Beas. Kulu Valley, on the other hand, in the upper course of river Ravi, is a transverse valley.

The Trans-Himalayan ranges

The trans-Himalayan mountain consists of the Zaskar, Ladakh, Kailash and Karakoram ranges. The Zaskar range separates at 80-degree East longitude from the Greater Himalaya and runs eastward. North of it is situated the Ladakh range which continues eastward to give off the Kailash range as an offshoot. River Indus originates from the northern slope of the Kailash range.

The Karakoram Range is the northernmost mountain range of India, and it has the highest peak of India as K-2 at 8,611 metres. It serves as the watershed between India and Tajikistan, and forms India’s boundary with Afghanistan and China.

(Photo: Niti Aayog)
To the northeast of the Karakoram range is situated the Ladakh Plateau which is the driest place of India — it is a cold desert. It is highly dissected and divided into several plains, for example, Soda Plains, Aksai Chin, Lingzi Tanga, Depsang Plans and Chang Chenmo.

The Eastern Hills

Beyond the Namcha Barwa-Brahmaputra Gorge, the Himalayas make a sharp southward turn and goes into the Arakan Yoma mountain of Myanmar. In between several small mountain ranges are situated. These are Patkai Bum, Naga Hills, Manipur Hills, Mizo Hills, Barail Hills, Kohima Hills, and Garo-Khasi-Jaintia Hills.

Patkai Bum is the northernmost among them and forms the boundary between India and Myanmar. It is made up of strong sandstone. Towards south, it merges with the Naga Hills. Patkai Bum and Naga Hills together form the watershed between India and Myanmar. In the Naga Hills is situated the highest peak of the Northeast India called the Saramati at 3,826 metres.

Further south is situated Manipur Hills forming border with Myanmar. In the extreme south is situated Mizo Hills having the highest peak in the southern NE India. It is called the Blue Mountain which reaches up to 2,157 metres.

There are also some outcrop hills such as Barail Range, which separates the Naga and the Manipur hills. Between the Barail Range and the Manipur Hills is situated the Loktak basin.

Another range is the Kohima Hills situated west of the Naga Hills made up of sandstone and slate, and are very rough topography. Besides, there are three hills, ranges or plateaus in Meghalaya called Garo, Khasi and Jaintia. They are rather considered as a portion of the Peninsular Plateau detached by the Bengal Basin.