This MCQ module is based on: Mineral Types & Metallic Mineral Belts of India
Mineral Types & Metallic Mineral Belts of India
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Mineral & Energy Resources: Types & Metallic Minerals of India
NCERT India: People and Economy — Unit III, Chapter 5 (Part 1)
India’s Mineral Wealth: Built into the Bedrock
India is endowed with a rich variety of mineral resources because of its varied geological structure. The bulk of the country’s commercially valuable minerals are products of pre-Palaeozoic age — in other words, they were formed hundreds of millions of years ago. They are mainly associated with the metamorphic and igneous rocks of peninsular India. The vast alluvial plain tract of north India, by contrast, is largely devoid of minerals of economic use because the alluvium is only a thin sedimentary cover laid down by rivers in geologically recent times.
This uneven endowment matters because mineral resources provide the country with the necessary base for industrial development. Iron and steel, aluminium, copper wires, fertilisers, cement, electronics — almost everything that modern industry produces — rests on a small set of minerals dug out of specific districts in the peninsular plateau. In this chapter, we shall examine the availability of various types of mineral? and energy resources in the country.
Fig 5.1 — Classification of Minerals
Types of Mineral Resources
On the basis of chemical and physical properties, minerals may be grouped under two main categories — metallic and non-metallic — with each category divided further as shown in Fig. 5.1.
Metallic Minerals
Metallic minerals are the sources of metals. Iron ore, copper and gold all yield metals on smelting and are placed in this category. Metallic minerals are further sub-divided into ferrous? and non-ferrous? metallic minerals.
- Ferrous metallic minerals contain iron — for example iron ore itself, manganese, chromite, nickel and cobalt.
- Non-ferrous metallic minerals have no iron content — for example copper, bauxite, zinc, lead, gold and silver.
Non-Metallic Minerals
Non-metallic minerals are of two kinds. Organic non-metallics, also called mineral fuels, are derived from buried plant and animal life and include coal and petroleum. Inorganic non-metallics include industrial minerals such as mica, limestone, dolomite, gypsum and graphite.
The northern plains of India, formed by silt brought down by the Ganga, Yamuna and Brahmaputra, are the most fertile farmland on the planet — yet they have hardly any commercial mineral deposits. Why?
Hint: Think about how minerals form and how alluvium is laid down. Metallic minerals crystallise inside hot, deep igneous and metamorphic rocks over hundreds of millions of years. Alluvium, however, is just loose sand and silt deposited by rivers within the last few thousand years. It is too young, too soft and too uniform to host metallic ore bodies. The minerals lie underneath, sometimes 1–2 km below the surface in the buried bedrock, but mining them through the alluvium is not economic. By contrast, the peninsular plateau exposes the same ancient rocks at the surface, where they can be quarried directly.
Distribution of Minerals in India
Most of India’s metallic minerals occur in the peninsular plateau region, embedded in old crystalline rocks. Over 97 per cent of coal reserves are found in the valleys of the Damodar, Sone, Mahanadi and Godavari. Petroleum reserves are located in the sedimentary basins of Assam, Gujarat and Mumbai High (the off-shore region in the Arabian Sea); new reserves have also been located in the Krishna–Godavari and Kaveri basins?. As a thumb-rule, most of India’s major mineral resources occur to the east of a line linking Mangaluru and Kanpur.
Minerals in India are concentrated in three broad belts (with some sporadic occurrences in isolated pockets) — the North-Eastern Plateau, the South-Western Plateau, the North-Western Region — plus a Himalayan belt and the off-shore Indian Ocean region.
Fig 5.2 — Mineral Belts of India (Schematic)
The North-Eastern Plateau Region
This belt covers Chhotanagpur (Jharkhand), the Odisha Plateau, West Bengal and parts of Chhattisgarh. The region contains a great variety of minerals: iron ore, coal, manganese, bauxite and mica. The simultaneous presence of iron ore and coal here is the geographical reason why most of India’s major iron and steel industry — Jamshedpur, Bokaro, Rourkela, Bhilai, Durgapur — is concentrated in this single belt.
The South-Western Plateau Region
This belt extends over Karnataka, Goa, contiguous Tamil Nadu uplands and Kerala. It is rich in ferrous metals and bauxite and contains high-grade iron ore, manganese and limestone. The belt lacks coal except for the brown coal (lignite) at Neyveli?. It does not have as diversified mineral deposits as the North-Eastern belt. Kerala has deposits of monazite and thorium?, and bauxite clay; Goa has iron ore deposits.
The North-Western Region
This belt extends along the Aravali range in Rajasthan and parts of Gujarat; the minerals are associated with the Dharwar system of rocks. Copper and zinc are the major minerals. Rajasthan is rich in building stones — sandstone, granite and marble. Gypsum and Fuller’s earth deposits are also extensive. Dolomite and limestone provide raw material for the cement industry. Gujarat is known for its petroleum deposits, and both Gujarat and Rajasthan have rich sources of salt.
The Himalayan Belt
The Himalayan belt is another mineral belt where copper, lead, zinc, cobalt and tungsten are known to occur on both the eastern and western flanks. The Assam Valley has mineral oil deposits, and additional oil resources are found offshore near Mumbai Coast (Mumbai High).
Pick any one of the four mineral belts above and find the specific districts where its minerals are extracted. Mark them on a blank map of India and label each with the principal mineral mined there.
Sample answer (North-Eastern Plateau):
- Iron ore — Sundergarh, Mayurbhanj, Kendujhar (Odisha); Poorbi & Pashchimi Singhbhum (Jharkhand); Durg & Bailadila (Chhattisgarh).
- Coal — Jharia, Bokaro, Giridih, Karanpura (Jharkhand); Raniganj (West Bengal); Korba (Chhattisgarh); Talcher (Odisha).
- Manganese — Bonai, Kendujhar, Sundergarh (Odisha).
- Bauxite — Lohardaga (Jharkhand); Kalahandi, Sambalpur, Koraput, Bolangir (Odisha).
- Mica — Hazaribagh plateau, Koderma (Jharkhand).
Ferrous Minerals
Ferrous minerals such as iron ore, manganese and chromite provide a strong base for the development of metallurgical industries. India is well-placed in respect of ferrous minerals both in reserves and production.
Iron Ore
India is endowed with fairly abundant resources of iron ore. It has the largest reserves of iron ore in Asia. The two main types of ore found are haematite? and magnetite?. Indian iron ore commands strong demand in international markets because of its superior quality. The mines occur in close proximity to the coal fields of the north-eastern plateau, which gives Indian steel-making a major locational advantage.
About 95 per cent of total iron-ore reserves are located in the states of Odisha, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, Goa, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.
State-by-State Mining Centres
| State | Important districts / mines | Key fact |
|---|---|---|
| Odisha | Hill ranges of Sundergarh, Mayurbhanj, Jhar; mines of Gurumahisani, Sulaipet, Badampahar (Mayurbhanj), Kiruburu (Kendujhar), Bonai (Sundergarh) | India’s leading producer (~35% share) |
| Jharkhand | Noamundi & Gua in Poorbi and Pashchimi Singhbhum? — some of India’s oldest mines; iron-and-steel plants cluster around them | Belt extends to Durg, Dantewara & Bailadila |
| Chhattisgarh | Bailadila?; Dalli and Rajhara in Durg | Bailadila exports high-grade ore via Visakhapatnam |
| Karnataka | Sandur–Hospet area of Ballari; Baba Budan hills? and Kudremukh? in Chikkamagaluru; parts of Shivamogga, Chitradurg & Tumakuru | Kudremukh ore was at one time exported as fine concentrate |
| Maharashtra | Chandrapur, Bhandara, Ratnagiri | Smaller share but important locally |
| Telangana | Karimnagar, Warangal | Linked to Singareni coal |
| Andhra Pradesh | Kurnool, Cuddapah, Anantapur | Feeds Visakhapatnam steel plant |
| Tamil Nadu | Salem, Nilgiris | Magnetite-rich zones |
| Goa | Multiple coastal mines | Has emerged as an important producer of iron ore |
Chart — Top iron-ore producing states in India (approximate share of production)
Manganese
Manganese is an important raw material for the smelting of iron ore and for manufacturing ferro-alloys. Manganese deposits are found in almost all geological formations but are mainly associated with the Dharwar system.
| Producer | Major mining areas |
|---|---|
| Odisha (~35% leading producer) | Bonai, Kendujhar, Sundergarh, Gangpur, Koraput, Kalahandi, Bolangir |
| Madhya Pradesh | Balaghat — Chhindwara — Nimar — Mandla — Jhabua belt |
| Karnataka | Dharwar, Ballari, Belagavi, North Canara, Chikkmagaluru, Shivamogga, Chitradurg, Tumakuru |
| Maharashtra | Nagpur, Bhandara, Ratnagiri (disadvantage: located far from steel plants) |
| Other minor producers | Telangana, Goa, Jharkhand |
Answer: Because the region simultaneously offers iron ore (Singhbhum, Mayurbhanj, Bailadila), coking coal (Jharia, Raniganj, Bokaro), manganese, limestone, water from the Damodar and a dense railway network — all the inputs of integrated steel plants are within short rail distance.
Non-Ferrous Minerals
India is poorly endowed with non-ferrous metallic minerals except for bauxite. We will look at bauxite and copper here; mica and other non-metallics are taken up in Part 2.
Bauxite
Bauxite? is the ore used in the manufacture of aluminium. It is found mainly in Tertiary deposits and is associated with laterite rocks occurring extensively on the plateau or hill ranges of peninsular India and also along the country’s coastal tracts.
| State | Producing areas |
|---|---|
| Odisha (~50% — largest producer) | Kalahandi, Sambalpur (leading); Bolangir, Koraput; Panchpatmali plateau supplies the National Aluminium Co. (NALCO) smelter at Damanjodi/Angul |
| Jharkhand | Patlands of Lohardaga (rich deposits) |
| Maharashtra | Kolaba, Thane, Ratnagiri, Satara, Pune, Kolhapur |
| Chhattisgarh | Amarkantak plateau |
| Madhya Pradesh | Katni–Jabalpur area, Balaghat |
| Gujarat | Bhavnagar, Jamnagar (major coastal deposits) |
| Minor producers | Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Goa |
Copper
Copper is an indispensable metal in the electrical industry for making wires, electric motors, transformers and generators. It is alloyable, malleable and ductile. Copper is also mixed with gold to provide strength to jewellery.
| Producer | Districts |
|---|---|
| Jharkhand | Singhbhum district (the country’s oldest copper belt; Mosabani, Rakha, Roam mines) |
| Madhya Pradesh | Balaghat district (Malanjkhand — the largest single copper deposit in India) |
| Rajasthan | Jhunjhunu and Alwar districts — the famous Khetri copper belt operated by Hindustan Copper Ltd. |
| Minor producers | Agnigundala (Guntur, Andhra Pradesh); Chitradurg & Hasan (Karnataka); South Arcot (Tamil Nadu) |
Q. Using examples of Singhbhum (iron ore) and Jharia (coal), explain why this proximity reduced the cost of producing steel in India.
Answer guide: Coking coal is heavy and expensive to transport. When iron ore (Noamundi, Singhbhum) and coal (Jharia, Bokaro) lie within ~150 km of each other and on a common rail network, the freight bill on bulk inputs falls sharply. This is why the Tata Iron and Steel Company (1907 Jamshedpur), Bokaro, Rourkela and Durgapur all sit in or near this corridor.
Competency-Based Questions — Mineral Resources of India
Reason (R): The North-Eastern Plateau has both iron ore and coking coal in close proximity along with limestone and water.
Reason (R): Laterite rocks form under hot, humid tropical conditions where intense leaching concentrates aluminium oxides.
Reason (R): The Northern Plains are made up of recent alluvium that is too young and too thin to host metallic ore bodies.