Narrow coastal strip running along the arabian sea
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Arabian Sea, northwestern part of the Indian Ocean, covering a total area of about 1,491,000 square miles (3,862,000 square km) and forming part of the principal sea route between Europe and India. It is bounded to the west by the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, to the north by Iran and Pakistan, to the east by India, and to the south by the remainder of the Indian Ocean. To the north the Gulf of Oman connects the sea with the Persian Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz. To the west the Gulf of Aden connects it with the Red Sea via the Bab el-Mandeb (Bāb al-Mandab) Strait. It has a mean depth of 8,970 feet (2,734 metres). In Roman times its name was Mare Erythraeum (Eryth
Answer:
These are narrow coastal strips, running along the Arabian Sea on the west and Bay of Bengal on the east. These are known as western coast and eastern coast of the coastal plains. The western coast is sandwiched between the Western Ghats and the Arabian Sea. It is a narrow plain and consists of three sections.