conclusion on peninsular river in 8 lines
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As late as the middle of the nineteenth century, over 95 per cent of the land area of Borneo and the Peninsula was still under forest.
Early European travellers who climbed to high places provided descriptions of "ranges of hill and valley everywhere covered with interminable forest, with glistening rivers winding among them" (Wallace, 1869: 25).
A small population, probably not more than 1,500,000 in Borneo and the Peninsula together in 1800 (Reid, 1988: 14), was already being augmented by immigrants, but the majority still consisted of two main groups of people.
There were rice-farming and fishing lower-riverine and coastal Muslim people who spoke mutually intelligible dialects of Malay.
Inland were shifting cultivators and hunter-gatherers who were mainly animist, tribally organized, and spoke a variety of languages. Only in certain more accessible areas were these people strongly influenced by Islam.
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the peninsular rivers are seasonal because they fully water in the rainy seasons but in summer and winter most of the peninsular rivers became waterless. the Narmada and Tapi are the two rivers that go and mix in the Arabian sea.
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