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Three Geological Divisions of India

🎓 Class 11 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 2 — Structure and Physiography ⏱ ~25 min
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Class 11 · Geography · India: Physical Environment

Chapter 2 · Structure & Physiography — The Three Geological Divisions

Why does India look the way it does — a wall of young, jagged mountains in the north, an ancient flat-topped tableland in the south, and a vast crescent of fertile flatland sandwiched between them? The answer lies under our feet, written in 4,600 million years of earth history. This part traces India's three big geological building blocks and the plate tectonic story that fused them.

2.1 Earth, Plates and the Indian Story

Our earth is roughly 4,600 million years old. Over this immense span of time, two great families of forces — endogenic forces? rising from the planet's hot interior, and exogenic forces? attacking from the surface — have shaped every hill, valley, plain and coast that you see today. The most powerful expression of endogenic activity is the slow, ceaseless drift of the earth's lithospheric plates, which rearrange continents, raise mountains, open oceans and trigger earthquakes.

📖 Key Idea — Plate Tectonics & India
Millions of years ago, the Indian plate lay south of the Equator, attached to a much larger landmass that also contained the Australian plate. As Gondwana? broke up, the Australian plate drifted south-east while the Indian plate raced north towards Asia. That northward journey is still in progress — and it is responsible for everything from the Himalayas' rising peaks to the seismicity of the Indo-Gangetic plain.

2.1.1 Consequences of India's Northward Drift

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Birth of the Himalayas
Collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates buckled marine sediments upward into the world's highest fold mountain chain.
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Tethys Sea Closed
The shallow Tethys Sea between the two plates was squeezed out, leaving behind the rocks of the Greater Himalayan range.
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A Geo-Synclinal Trough
In front of the rising mountains, a long depression formed; rivers from north and south filled it with sediment to create the Northern Plain.
Active Seismicity
Continuing convergence keeps the northern belt earthquake-prone — Bhuj 2001, Kashmir 2005 and Sikkim 2011 are stark reminders.

Through the interplay of these endogenic and exogenic forces, together with the lateral drift of plates, India's present-day geological structure took shape. On the basis of variations in this structure, India can be divided into three broad geological divisions, each broadly matching one of the country's major physical zones:

🧭 Three Geological Divisions of India
(i) The Peninsular Block
(ii) The Himalayas and other Peninsular Mountains
(iii) The Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain

2.2 The Peninsular Block

The Peninsular Block is India's oldest, most rigid landmass. Its irregular northern boundary can be drawn from Kachchh along the western flank of the Aravali Range near Delhi, then roughly parallel to the Yamuna and Ganga as far as the Rajmahal Hills and the Ganga delta. Two outliers belong to it as well — the Karbi Anglong and Meghalaya plateau in the north-east, and most of Rajasthan in the west. The Malda fault in West Bengal separates the north-eastern outlier from the Chotanagpur plateau, while the desert and desert-like surfaces of Rajasthan simply overlay this same hard basement.

2.2.1 Composition: Ancient Gneisses & Granites

The Peninsula is built essentially of a great complex of very ancient gneisses? and granites. Since the Cambrian period, this block has stood like a stable pillar — with one big exception: parts of the western coast have been submerged beneath the sea, and other patches have been altered by tectonic activity, though the original basement remained essentially intact.

Because the Peninsular Block forms part of the larger Indo-Australian Plate, it has experienced repeated vertical movements and block-faulting. The famous rift valleys of the Narmada, Tapi and Mahanadi and the block-mountain character of the Satpura range are textbook examples of this faulting.

🌍 Why It Matters
Most of the Peninsula's hills today — the Aravali, Nallamala, Javadi, Veliconda, Palkonda and Mahendragiri ranges — are relict and residual mountains, the worn-down stumps of much taller, ancient ranges. The river valleys cutting through them are shallow, with low gradients, because they have had millions of years to grade themselves to base level.

2.2.2 Drainage Character of the Peninsula

Most east-flowing peninsular rivers — the Mahanadi, Krishna, Kaveri and Godavari — build large deltas before entering the Bay of Bengal. By contrast, the west-flowing rivers (Narmada, Tapi) flow through rift valleys and reach the Arabian Sea without forming deltas. This contrast is a direct fingerprint of the Peninsula's tilted, faulted structure.

THINK ABOUT IT — Comparing Two Gradients
Bloom: L4 Analyse

You have already studied how to calculate the gradient of a river in Practical Work in Geography — Part I. Pick one Himalayan river (e.g. the Beas) and one Peninsular river (e.g. the Krishna). Look up the elevation of their source and mouth, plus their length. Calculate the gradient (drop ÷ distance). Compare the two figures. Why is the Himalayan river so much steeper? What does this difference mean for erosion, sediment load and the kinds of landforms each river creates?

✅ Pointers
Himalayan rivers are youthful — they cut through still-rising fold mountains, so their gradient is steep, their valleys V-shaped, and their sediment load enormous (which is why they later build vast plains). Peninsular rivers are graded — they have flowed across the same rigid block for hundreds of millions of years, smoothing their long profiles into shallow, low-gradient channels. Steep gradient → strong vertical erosion + gorges, rapids, waterfalls; gentle gradient → meanders, mature deltas.

2.3 The Himalayas & Other Peninsular Mountains

If the Peninsular Block is old and rigid, the Himalayas are its opposite: young, weak and flexible in geological structure. Because they are still being pushed up by the convergence of the Indian and Eurasian plates, they remain at the mercy of both endogenic and exogenic forces — producing fresh faults, folds and thrust planes today.

These mountains are tectonic in origin, dissected by fast-flowing rivers in their youthful stage. The signature landforms tell the story:

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Gorges
Deep, narrow, near-vertical river cuts (Indus gorge, Brahmaputra near Namcha Barwa) — the hallmark of vigorous downcutting.
V-Shaped Valleys
Valleys still being incised; lateral erosion has not yet had time to widen them into broad U-shapes.
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Rapids & Waterfalls
Knick-points where the river encounters resistant rock — common because the long profile is far from graded.
⚠️ Hazard Implication
Because the Himalayas are tectonically active, the entire belt — including Kashmir, Himachal, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh — falls in high seismic-risk zones. The same rising mountains that capture monsoon rains and feed perennial rivers also produce earthquakes, landslides and glacial-lake outburst floods.

2.4 The Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain

India's third great geological division is the long, low plain drained by the Indus, Ganga and Brahmaputra. It was originally a geo-synclinal? depression that reached its maximum development during the third phase of Himalayan mountain building, approximately 64 million years ago. Since then, the depression has been steadily filled by sediments brought down by the Himalayan and Peninsular rivers.

Table 2.1: Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain — Key Facts
AttributeValue / Description
OriginGeo-synclinal trough formed in front of rising Himalayas
Age of trough~64 million years (third phase of Himalayan orogeny)
Rivers building itIndus, Ganga, Brahmaputra (Himalayan + Peninsular tributaries)
Average depth of alluvium1,000–2,000 m
Geological statusNewest of India's three geological divisions

The depth of alluvial deposits in the plain ranges from 1,000 to 2,000 m on average — an astonishing thickness of soft sediment that explains both the plain's flat profile and its remarkable agricultural fertility.

India — North-to-South Geological Cross-Section

Bloom: L4 Analyse
North–South Geological Cross-Section of India (Schematic) Sea Level Himalayas (Young Fold) Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain Alluvium 1,000–2,000 m thick (geo-synclinal trough) Peninsular Block (Ancient gneiss/granite) Rigid, stable since Cambrian Indian plate moving north Young, weak, folded Newest sediment fill Oldest, rigid block

Figure 2.1: Schematic geological cross-section. The young, folded Himalayas in the north, the soft alluvial wedge of the Northern Plain in the middle, and the ancient Peninsular Block to the south together form India's three geological divisions.

2.5 Putting the Three Divisions Together

Stand at the centre of India and look around. To your north rises a young, still-growing wall of folded rock. Beneath your feet lies the world's thickest single belt of fertile alluvium. To your south stretches an ancient stable shield older than most of the rocks on earth's surface. Each division has a distinct origin, a distinct rock-type, a distinct relief — and a distinct gift to Indian society.

Table 2.2: India's Three Geological Divisions at a Glance
DivisionAge & StatusRock CharacterMajor Landforms
Peninsular BlockVery old, stable since CambrianAncient gneiss & graniteAravali, Satpura, rift valleys (Narmada, Tapi, Mahanadi); relict hills
Himalayas & other Peninsular MountainsYoung, geologically activeFolded sedimentary, metamorphic; still risingGorges, V-valleys, rapids, waterfalls
Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra PlainNewest (~64 mn yrs trough; alluvium accumulated since)Soft alluvium 1,000–2,000 m thickFloodplains, deltas (e.g. Sunderbans), riverine islands

Figure 2.2: Comparative thickness of cover material — the Northern Plain's alluvial blanket dwarfs surface deposits on the rigid Peninsular Block, reflecting their very different geological histories.

LET'S EXPLORE — Mapping the Plate Journey
Bloom: L3 Apply

Using a world atlas, sketch the Indian plate at four moments in time: (a) ~140 million years ago, attached to Gondwana south of the Equator; (b) ~80 million years ago, drifting north as a separate plate; (c) ~50 million years ago, just colliding with Asia; (d) today. On each map, mark the plate's approximate latitude and the position of the Tethys Sea. In two sentences, describe how each of India's three geological divisions reflects a different stage of this journey.

✅ Guidance
The Peninsular Block is the original Gondwanan piece — it carries the oldest rocks, formed long before the journey began. The Himalayas record the moment of collision — Tethys sediments were squeezed up into folds. The Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain records the aftermath — a depression in front of the rising mountains, filled in over the last ~64 million years.
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Competency-Based Questions — Geological Divisions

Case Study: A geology student stands beside the Narmada near Jabalpur and watches the river plunge through a narrow gorge between marble cliffs. A few hundred kilometres north, near Lucknow, she finds the Ganga winding lazily across a flat, fertile plain. A few hundred kilometres further north, near Joshimath, she sees the Alaknanda thundering through a near-vertical V-shaped valley. Three rivers, three landscapes — but each one a window into one of India's three geological divisions.
Q1. The Narmada's gorge near Jabalpur cuts through marble (a metamorphic rock). The river follows a long, fault-controlled trough. To which geological division does this landscape belong?
L3 Apply
  • (A) The Himalayas & other Peninsular Mountains
  • (B) The Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain
  • (C) The Peninsular Block
  • (D) The Coastal Plains
Answer: (C) — The Narmada flows through a classic rift valley of the Peninsular Block. Its bed of metamorphic rock is part of the ancient gneiss-granite complex characteristic of this rigid, stable shield.
Q2. The Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain has alluvium up to 2,000 m thick. Which sequence of events best explains this?
L4 Analyse
  • (A) Ancient lava flows filled an old basin
  • (B) A geo-synclinal trough formed in front of the rising Himalayas and was then filled by rivers
  • (C) Glaciers eroded the plain to a uniform surface
  • (D) Wind deposition built up a thick mantle of loess
Answer: (B) — The plain originated as a geo-synclinal depression (~64 million years ago, third phase of Himalayan orogeny) and has since been filled by sediment carried by the Indus, Ganga and Brahmaputra together with their Peninsular tributaries.
Q3. In four sentences, contrast the river behaviour of the Peninsular Block and the Himalayan division, linking each to its underlying geological character.
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: Peninsular rivers flow over a rigid, stable shield that has stood essentially undisturbed since the Cambrian. Their valleys are therefore shallow, gradients gentle and erosive power modest, and east-flowing rivers like the Mahanadi, Krishna, Kaveri and Godavari build mature deltas. Himalayan rivers, by contrast, drain a young, weak and flexible mountain belt that is still rising; their gradients are steep, valleys V-shaped, with frequent gorges, rapids and waterfalls, and they carry massive sediment loads. The contrast in river behaviour is not random — it is a direct mirror of the contrasting age, rigidity and ongoing tectonics of the two divisions.
HOT Q. Design a one-page infographic titled "India's Three Floors" in which each geological division is shown as a different building floor. Decide which floor is the lowest, which is the middle and which is the top, and explain (in one short caption per floor) why your ordering reflects geological age and stability.
L6 Create
Hint: A natural ordering would put the Peninsular Block as the foundation (oldest, most stable, the bedrock of the country); the Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain as the ground floor (newest material, soft, accumulated on top of a much older basement); and the Himalayas as the upper floor (young, still under construction, balanced precariously above). Captions should mention age, rock-type and ongoing processes.
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Geological Divisions
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): The Peninsular Block is one of the most stable parts of the Indian landmass.
Reason (R): It is composed of very ancient gneisses and granites and has stood essentially undisturbed since the Cambrian period, with only minor block-faulting and coastal submergence.
Answer: (A) — Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains why the Peninsula has remained a rigid, stable block: ancient hard rocks plus only limited tectonic disturbance.
Assertion (A): Himalayan rivers display gorges, V-shaped valleys, rapids and waterfalls.
Reason (R): The Himalayas are old, fully eroded mountains and their rivers have reached their graded long profile.
Answer: (C) — A is true; the listed features are textbook signs of youthful streams. R is false: the Himalayas are young, weak and still rising, which is exactly why their rivers remain in the youthful stage.
Assertion (A): The Indo-Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain has alluvial deposits 1,000–2,000 m deep on average.
Reason (R): The plain occupies a former geo-synclinal trough that has been receiving sediment from Himalayan and Peninsular rivers for tens of millions of years.
Answer: (A) — Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation: a long-lived sediment trap fed by two great mountain systems is exactly what produces a 1–2 km thick alluvial blanket.
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