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Unit 8 Pakistan India Nepal Bhutan Sri Lanka Bangladesh Maldives People in this area believe that Mt. Meru, was the center of the physical and spiritual world. They described it “rivers of sweet water” flowing down the sides of the Mts. Mt. Meru, only exists in myth, Mt. Everest at 29,035 feet above sea level. Plus other towering peaks of the Himalalya Mts. Himalayas are part of South Asia. South Asia is sometime called a subcontinent; a large landmass that is smaller than a continent. Indian subcontinent because India dominates the region. Even though is about half the size of the U.S., it has one billion inhabitants—one-fifth of the world population. The South Asian peninsula is border by the Himalayas, Indian Ocean, the Arabian Sea & Bay of Bengal. The Himalayas has two dozens peaks raising to 24,000 feet and stretch for 1,500 miles; form a giant barrier between the Indian Subcontinent and China. 1. Collision of large tectonic plates created the Himalayas, which form the border between India and China and contain the landlocked kingdoms of Nepal and Bhutan. Also created the Hindu Kush, at the western end of the chain, and the Karakoram Mts. In the north-central portion of the chain. The Hindu Kush are mts. that lie at the west end of the Himalayas; between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Bloody battles have been fought here for control of major land routes through these mts. The mighty Karakoram Mts. raise in the northeastern portion; home of the world’s second highest peak K2. Several smaller mts. ranges in central India; including the Vindhya Range. 2. the Deccan Plateau covers much of southern India. Also the Ganges Plain, the Chota Nagpur Plateau, the Karnataka Plateau cover the region. Two mountains ranges, the Western Ghats and the Eastern Ghats, flank the plateau, separating it from the coast. They block moist winds and keep rain from reaching the interior. As a result, the Deccan is an arid region. The first great civilization of South Asia developed along the banks of the Indus River more than 4,000 years ago. What might have been some reasons for a civilization developing at the location? What two countries does it affect? The three great rivers systems: the Indus, the Ganges, & the Brahmaputra. 3. The Indus, the Ganges, and the Brahmaputra originate in the Himalayas. The Indus flows to the Arabian Sea; the Ganges and Brahmaputra to the Bay of Bengal. They bring rich alluvial soil to the delta, a region covering 65,000 square miles. Melting snow in the summer and the monsoon force the rivers to burst their banks. So much water comes that Bangladesh is turn into an inland sea before it dries up. These rivers play a key role in supporting life in South Asia; crucial for irrigation for agricultural. They also carry rich soil called alluvial soil from the mountains. When banks overflow, they carry it to the rich farm land. 4. Indo-Gangetic Plain, an alluvial plain, is one of the most fertile farming regions in the world. Heavy populated area of South Asia. 3/5th of India’s population. Cities: New Delhi and Kolkata in India & Dakha in Bangladesh. To the west it becomes drier and requires more irrigation; the Thar or Great Indian Desert. It is a lush tropical land of great natural beauty. Many small rivers cascade from these mts. 5. Large, teardrop shaped island country off India’s southeastern tip. Center of island has tall, rugged mountains (8,000 feet): northern side has low hills and rolling farmland. Perimeter is a coastal plain with beaches. 2004 Tusnami 6. An archipelago, or island group, of more than 1,200 small islands, stretching for almost 500 miles toward the equator; these islands are atolls, low-lying tops of submerged volcanoes. Only about 200 of the island are inhabited. The beauty of the southern island is just one of many physical assets of South Asia. The subcontinent boasts of a wide variety of natural resources that support human life, but its rapidly growing population puts great pressure on its land and resources. The great rivers provide a mean for survival; fishing, farming & hydroelectric. Small and large scale irrigation projects. Mackerel, sardines, carp and catfish. Government is working to hardness water for electric power. 1. Region relies heavily on water and soil resources for farming and fishing. Water also provides transportation and power; water is used for hydroelectric energy. Ranks fourth in the world in coal production and has enough petroleum to supply about half its oil needs. India, Pakistan & Bangladesh have natural gas. Uranium is found in India for nuclear energy; iron ore deposit in India’s Deccan Plateau. Manganese, gypsum, chromium, bauxite, copper & mica (key component in electrical equipment) 2. Most energy in South Asia is generated from mineral resources. Energy resources include coal, petroleum, and natural gas, as well as uranium. Region has large iron-ore deposits, and India supplies most of the world’s mica. India and Sri Lanka also have substantial gemstone deposits. India is know for its diamonds; Sri Lanka for its sapphires and rubies. 3. Timber and other forest products important; rain forests in India produce hardwoods like sal and teak, along with bamboo and sandalwood. Highland forest in Bhutan and Nepal have pine, fir, and other softwoods. Deforestation is a severe problem; it causes soil erosion, flooding, landslides and loss of wildlife habitats. It has devastated formerly dense forest in India, Bangladesh & Sri Lanka. Half of the climate zones can be found in South Asia There is tropical wet; tropical wet & dry in the southern part of India. Desert & semiarid in the western end of the Plain and in between the coastal areas. Northern India, Nepal & Bangladesh have humid subtropical Highland can be found in the Himalayas and northern mts. 1. Highland-coldest climate, high Himalayas and other mts. 2. Humid subtropical zone-includes IndoGangetic plain 3. Semiarid zone-high temperatures, light rainfall in parts of the Deccan Plateau and at western end of Indo-Gangetic Plain 4. desert zon-includes Thar Desert 5. tropical wet zone-along eastern and western coasts of India and in Bangladesh 6. tropical wet and dry-lots of rain; northern part of the subregion South Asia is greatly affected by monsoons or seasonal winds. October through February, dry wind blow across South Asia from the northeast. Winter monsoon June through September, the winds blow in from the Southwest, bringing moist ocean air. Heavy rains fall, especially in southwestern and Ganges Delta. Summer monsoon 7. seasonal winds that greatly affect the climate of the region, bringing heavy but unpredictable rain. Winter monsoon & Summer monsoon Beneficial: crucial to life on the subcontinent, Hardship: people living in the lowland of India & Bangladesh, unpredictable, too much rain in some area & little rain in others. Violent tropical storms are called cyclones in the Indian Ocean, typhoons in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, and hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean. 8. violent storms with fierce winds and heavy rains that can cause widespread damage and death Most destructive in Bangladesh, a lowlying coastal region where high waves can swamp large parts of the country. 1. tropical wet zone, highland zone in the north, and the river valleys and foothills of the humid subtropical zone 2. has caused soil erosion, flooding, climate changes, and loss of habitat for wildlife; less than one-fifth of India’s original forests remain 3. desert shrub, a mixture of low trees and grasses 4. little plant life, as in Thar Desert 1. Known as Mother Ganges; water believed to be spiritually healing; People enter the waters to bathe, to drink, and to scatter ashes of the dead. 2. Source of drinking water, yet people can get diseases from drinking or even bathing in it. One of the most polluted rivers in the world; receives sewage and industrial waste as well as corpses. Cleanup has been slow. 1. monsoon rains swell the rivers; cyclones 2. tremendous hardship caused by storm surges, which flood fields 3. cost of building a dam too high for a country with limited financial and technological resources. 4. completion of the dam that closed the Feni River