1) GMT and IST
2) Western Ghats and Eastern Ghats
3) West Coastal Plains and East Coastal Plains
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1)
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), previously used as the international civil time standard, is the mean solar time in Greenwich, London. Today GMT is considered equivalent to UTC.
Indian Standard Time (IST) is the time observed across India.
India does not observe seasonal adjustments.
2)
The Eastern Ghats are a range of mountains along the eastern coast of India.
Western Ghats also known as Sahyadri are a range of mountains that run parallel to the western coast of the Indian peninsula.
3)
Located 50 km in width between the west coast of India and the Western Ghats hills, the Western Coastal Plains are a strip of coastal plain.
Whereas the Eastern Coastal Plains are a wide stretch of landmass of India, situated between the Eastern Ghats and the Bay of Bengal.
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), previously used as the international civil time standard, is the mean solar time in Greenwich, London. Today GMT is considered equivalent to UTC.
Indian Standard Time (IST) is the time observed across India.
India does not observe seasonal adjustments.
2)
The Eastern Ghats are a range of mountains along the eastern coast of India.
Western Ghats also known as Sahyadri are a range of mountains that run parallel to the western coast of the Indian peninsula.
3)
Located 50 km in width between the west coast of India and the Western Ghats hills, the Western Coastal Plains are a strip of coastal plain.
Whereas the Eastern Coastal Plains are a wide stretch of landmass of India, situated between the Eastern Ghats and the Bay of Bengal.
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