Geography, asked by anish9667, 5 months ago


Give an account of the Northern Plains of India.​

Answers

Answered by sarojini0077
0

Northern Plains are broadly divided into three sections

Punjab plain

Ganga plain

Brahmaputra plain

Punjab plain– The western part of Northern plain is called Punjab plain. It is formed by Indus and its tributaries ( Jhelum, Ravi, Sutlej, Beas, Chenab)

Ganga plain– it is the middle part of the plain. It extends from ghagar river in Haryana to the Teesta river in West Bengal., Express over the states of Haryana, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal.

Brahmaputra plain– It is the Eastern part of the plain lying in Assam and Arunachal Pradesh. It lies to the east of the Ganga plains .

thank you..

Answered by mahendra80001
0

Explanation:

The northern plain has been formed by the interplay of the three major river systems, namely– the Indus, the Ganga and the Brahmaputra along with their tributaries. This plain is formed of alluvial soil. The deposition of alluvium in a vast basin lying at the foothills of the Himalaya over millions of years, formed this fertile plain. It spreads over an area of 7 lakh sq. km. The plain being about 2400 Km long and 240 to 320 Km broad, is a densely populated physiographic division. With a rich soil cover combined with adequate water supply and favourable climate it is agriculturally a very productive part of India.

hope it helps you

Mark me brainliest plz

Similar questions