Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Indian Population at a Glance

Total population (2001)

1.0287 billion

Urban population

286 million

Percentage to world pop.

16.7%

Sex ratio (women to 1000 men)

933

State with Highest Female Sex Ratio

Kerala. 1058

Labour force (2004-05)

428 million

Population density (2001)

325 /km²

Birth rate (2008)

22.8‰

Death rate (2008)

7.4‰

Total fertility rate per woman (2010)

2.68‰

Urban area

2.1‰

Rural area

3.0‰

Infant mortality rate (2007)

53‰

Life expectancy (2002-06)

63.5 yrs

Man

62.6 yrs

Woman

64.2 yrs

Literacy rate (2001)

64.84%

Man

75.2%

Woman

53.7%

State with maximum literacy rate (2001)

Kerala (90%)

State with minimum literacy rate (2001)

Bihar (47%)

State with Max decadal pop. growth Rate (2001)

Nagaland (64.53%)

State with highest population (2001)

U.P. (166 million)

State with minimum population (2001)

Sikkim (54 million)

State with maximum population Density (2001)

W.Bengal (903)

State with minimum population Density (2001)

Arunachal Pradesh (13)

Percentage of Hindus (2001)

80.5%

Percentage of Muslims (2001)

13.4%

Percentage of Christians (2001)

2.3%

Religion with maximum population growth (1991-2001)

Muslim (29.3%)

Religion with minimum population growth (1991-2001)

Sikh (16.9%)

Religion with maximum literacy (2001)

Jain (94.1%)

Religion with minimum literacy (2001)

Muslim (59.1%)

Religion with maximum women literacy (2001)

Jain (90.6%)

Religion with minimum women literacy (2001)

Muslim (50.1%)

Thursday, September 9, 2010

India – Some Facts

Geography

    * Location - South Asia, land border (15200 km), coastal border (7516 km) on the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal.
    * Coordinates of Geography: 8 ° 4 'and 37 ° 6' north latitude and 68 ° 7 'and 97 ° 25' east longitude.
    * Total area: 3,287,263 sq km, is not included controlled Kashmir, sources of India (100.569 km ²).
    * Comparison: 2.4% of land worldwide, the seventh largest country, 16% of the total population
    * Neighbours: The country shares its political borders with Pakistan in the North East and Afghanistan in the west and Bangladesh and Burma to the east, with China, Nepal and Bhutan to the north. Separates India from Sri Lanka, a narrow channel (inlet) formed by the Palk Strait and Gulf of Mannar.
    * Climate - varies from temperate monsoon in the south to temperate in the north.
    * Golf - Shelf in the south central plains of the Indus to the Ganges, deserts in west, Himalayas in north;
    * Elevations extremes - Lowest: Indian Ocean - 0 m, the highest - Kanchendzonga - 8.586 m.
    * Natural Resources - Coal (4 largest), iron ore, manganese, mica, bauxite, titanium ore, chromites, natural gas, diamonds, oil, limestone, arable land;
    * Earth - arable land: 54.4%, 2.74% permanent agriculture, other: 42.86% (2001);
    * Natural Hazards - Floods and severe flooding from monsoon rains and destructive storms, earthquakes;
    * Environment-current issues: deforestation, soil erosion, overgrazing, desertification, air pollution from industrial effluents and vehicle emissions, water pollution from sewage and runoff of pesticides agricultural, huge and growing population Burnout is natural resources.

     People

    * Population: 1.1 trillion
    * Age structure: 0-14 years: 31.2%, 15-64 years: 63.9%, 65 - 4.9%
    * Growth rate: 1.4%
    * Population below poverty line: 25% (described as less than 2,100 calories urban, 2400 rural)
    * Birth rate: 22 births / 1,000
    * Mortality rate: 8 deaths / 1,000
    * Sex ratio: 933:1000 female: male
    *
      Infant mortality rate: 57 deaths / 1,000 live births
    *
      Life expectancy at birth: 64 men, 66 women
    * Total fertility rate: 2.7 children / woman
    * HIV / AIDS: 2.5 million App.
    * Ethnic groups: Indo-Aryan 72%, Dravidian 25% Mongoloid and other 3% (2000)
    * Languages: 22 languages in total state, the national language - Hindi, English has associate status, but the most important language for national communication, political and commercial.
    * Religions - Hindu 82%, Muslim 12%, Christian 2.3%, Sikh 2%, Buddhist 0.8%, Jains 0.4%, other 0.4%
    *
      Literacy - 65% male: 70.2%, women: 48.3%
    * Army - 16 years of age for voluntary military service

     Government

    * Country name: Republic of India
    * Type of Government: Federal Republic
    * Capital: New Delhi
    * Administrative divisions: 28 states and 7 federal territories of the union
    * Independence: 15 August 1947 (from England)
    * National Day: August 15 (independent), January 26 (Republic day), January 30 (day of assassination of Mahatma Gandhi)

India - Geography

India is located between 8°4' and 37°6' north latitude and 68°7' and 97°25' east longitude. India measures 3214 Km from norht to south and 2933 kms from east to west with a total land area of 3,287,263 km². India is the 7th largest country in the world. It has a land frontier of 15,200 kms and a coastline of 7516.5 kms. Andaman and Nicobar islands in the bay of Bengal and Lakshadweep in the Arabian sea are parts of India. The country shares its political borders with Pakistan and Afghanistan on the west and Bangladesh and Burma on the east. The northern boundary is made up of China, Nepal and Bhutan. India is separated from Sri Lanka by a narrow channel of sea formed by Palk Strait and the Gulf of Mannar.

Physical Regions
The mainland, in geographical terms is broadly divided into a) the great mountains, b) the river the plains, c) the desert and d) the peninsula.

Mountain Ranges
the mountain extend for more than 2400 km. they are seven.
1. the Himalayas;
2. the Patkai and other ranges bordering India in the north and north east,
3. the Vindyas, which separate the Indo-Gangetic plain from the Deccan Plateau,
4. the Satpura,
5. the Aravalli
6. the Sahyadri, which covers the eastern fringe of the West Coast plains and
7. the Eastern Ghats, irregularly scattered on the East Coast and forming the boundary of the East Coast plains.

Watersheds
There are main three watersheds;
1. Himalayan range with its Karakoram branch in the north,
2. Vindhyan and Satpura ranges in Central India, and
3. Sahyadri or Western Ghats on the west coast.


Rivers and the Plains
The main rivers of the Himalayan group are the Indus, the Ganges and the Brahmaputra. Theser rivers are bothe snow-fed and rain-fed and have therefore continuous flow throughtout the year. Himalayan rivers discharge about 70% of their inflow into the sea. This includes about 5% from central Indian rivers. They join the Ganges and drain into the Bay of Bengal.
The plains of Ganges and Indus run for about 2400 kms with a width ranging from 240 to 320 kms. They are formed in the river basins of Ganges-Yamuna, Brahmaputra, Indus, Godavari, Kaveri etc.

Desert
Te desert region is located in the western and north western part of the country.It can be divided into two parts: the great desert extends from the edge of the Rann of Kutch beyond the Luni river northward. The whole of Rajastan-Sind frontier runs through this. The little desert extends from the Luni between Jaisalmer and Jodhpur up to northern wastes (dry and rocky land).

Peninsula
The peninsula is marked by elevated landmass with height ranging from 460 to 1220 m. The deccan and the Southern part surrounded by water on three sides make the peninsula. It is flanked by Eastern Ghats on the east and Western Ghat on the west. Between the Ghats and the Sea lies the narrow coastal belt.

Climate
Traditionally, seasons in India are divided into six - Vasanta (Spring) (Mar-Apr), Grishma (May-Jun), Varsha (Jul-Aug), Sharada (Sept-Oct), Hemanta (Nov-Dec) and Shishira (Jan-Feb). In broad terms, India experiences 3 main season, such as (a) Winter - Dec to March, (b) Summer - Apr to May and (c) Monsoon - South West - Jun to Sept, and NE (retreating SW monsoon) - Oct to Nov. Between the two main season are Spring and Autumn.

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