Geography, asked by 9392manishajoshi, 23 hours ago

the central highland
in English of India​

Answers

Answered by febafernandez2
0

Answer:

The Central Highlands of India are a biogeographic region in India formed by the disjunct ranges of the Satpura and Vindhya Hills. It is given the term 6A within the Deccan zone in the Rodgers and Panwar (1988) classification.

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Answered by harsh1334652
0

Answer:

The part of the peninsular plateau lying to the north of the Narmada River covering a major area of the Malwa plateau is known as the Central Highlands.

The Vindhyan range is bounded by the Central Highlands on the south and the Aravali range on the northwest.

The flow of the rivers draining this region, namely the Chambal, the Sind, the Betwa and Ken is from southwest to northeast, thus indicating the slope.

The Central Highlands are wider in the west but narrower in the east. The eastward extensions of this plateau are locally known as the Bundelkhand and Baghelkhand.

The Chotanagpur plateau marks the further eastward extension, drained by the Damodar River.

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