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Chota Nagpur plateau is in eastern India, in
Jharkhand state. The plateau is composed of Precambrian rocks (more than
540,000,000 years old). Chota Nagpur is the collective name for the
Ranchi, Hazaribagh, and Kodarma plateaus, which have an area of 25,293
sq m (65,509 sq km). Its largest division is the Ranchi Plateau, which
has an average elevation of 2,300 ft (700 m). The Chota Nagpur plateau
in its entirety lies between the basins of the Ganges and Son rivers to
the north and the Mahanadi River to the south; through its centre, from
west to east, runs the coal-bearing, faulted Damodar Valley. Numerous
streams have dissected the uplands into a peneplain (an area reduced
almost to a plain by erosion) with isolated hills.
Centuries of heavy cultivation have depleted the plateau of much of its
natural vegetation, though some valuable forests still remain. Forest
products, such as tussah silk and lac, are economically important. The
Chota Nagpur area has the most valuable concentration of mineral
resources in India. The Damodar Valley has vast coal reserves, and
Hazaribagh district is one of the main sources of mica in the world.
Other minerals are copper, limestone, bauxite, iron ore, asbestos, and
apatite (useful in the manufacture of phosphate fertilizers). A huge
thermal plant for generating electricity and a large steel mill are
located at Bokaro. Railroads cross the plateau, connecting Calcutta to
the southeast with Patna to the north, and also link other cities in the
south and west.
This Map was contributed by Suman Kandulna, Rourkela
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