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India is set apart from the rest
of Asia by the Himalayas, the
highest, youngest and still
evolving mountain chain on the
planet. The subcontinent as it
is rightly called, touches three
large water bodies and is
immediately recognizable on any
world map. This thick, roughly
triangular peninsula defines the
Bay of Bengal to the east, the
Arabian sea to the west, and the
India Ocean to the south.
India holds virtually every kind
of landscape imaginable. An
abundance of mountain ranges and
national parks provide ample
opportunity for eco-tourism and
trekking, and its sheer size
promises something for everyone.
From north to south India
extends a good 2000 miles (3200
km), where the island nation of
Sri Lanka seems to be squeezed
out of India like a great tear,
the synapse forming the Gulf of
Mannar.
Himalayas, the world's highest
mountain chain and Nepal as its
Neighbouring country dominate
India's northern border.
Following the sweeping mountains
to the northeast, its borders
narrow to a small channel that
passes between Nepal, Tibet,
Bangladesh, and Bhutan, then
spreads out again to meet Burma
in the "eastern triangle." Apart
from the Arabian Sea, its
western border is defined
exclusively by Pakistan.
North India is the country's
largest region begins with Jammu
and Kashmir, with terrain
varying from arid mountains in
the far north to the lake
country and forests near
Srinagar and Jammu. Moving south
along the Indus river, the North
becomes flatter and more
hospitable, widening into the
fertile plains of Punjab to the
west and the Himalayan foothills
of Uttar Pradesh and the Ganges
river valley to the East.
Cramped between these two states
is the capital city, Delhi.
The states of Gujarat,
Maharashtra, Goa, and part of
the massive, central state of
Madhya Pradesh constitute West
India. Extending from the
Gujarat peninsula down to Goa,
the west coast is lined with
some of India's best beaches.
The land along the coast is
typically lush with rainforests.
The Western Ghats separate the
verdant coast from the Vindya
Mountains and the dry Deccan
plateau further inland.
India is the home of the sacred
River Ganges and the majority of
Himalayan foothills, East India
begins with the states of Madhya
Pradesh, Bihar, Orissa, which
comprise the westernmost part of
the region. East India also
contains an area known as the
eastern triangle, which is
entirely distinct. This is the
last gulp of land that extends
beyond Bangladesh, culminating
in the Naga Hills along the
Burmese border.
India reaches its peninsular tip
with South India, which begins
with the Deccan in the north and
ends with Cape Comorin. The
states in South India are
Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil
Nadu, and Kerala, a favourite
leisure destination. The
southeast coast, mirroring the
west, also rests snugly beneath
a mountain range---the Eastern
Ghats.
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