40-787: The Chautang is a seasonal river, originating in the Sivalik Hills , in the Indian state of Haryana . The Chautang River is a tributary of the Sarsuti river which in turn is a tributary of the Ghaggar river . The Chautang river is a seasonal river in the state of Haryana , India . It is theorized by some to be a remnant of the ancient river Drishadvati . It joins the Ghaggar-Hakra River east of Suratgarh in Rajasthan . According to McIntosh, this river
80-524: A mountain range of the outer Himalayas . The literal translation of "Sivalik" is 'tresses of Shiva '. The hills are known for their numerous fossils, and is also home to the Soanian Middle Paleolithic archaeological culture. The Sivalik Hills are a mountain range of the outer Himalayas that stretches over about 2,400 km (1,500 mi) from the Indus River eastwards close to
120-681: Is a lowland region in parts of southern Nepal and northern India that lies to the south of the outer foothills of the Himalayas , the Sivalik Hills and north of the Indo-Gangetic Plain . This lowland belt is characterised by tall grasslands , scrub savannah , sal forests and clay rich swamps . In North India , the Terai spreads from the Yamuna River eastward across Haryana , Uttarakhand , Uttar Pradesh , Bihar and West Bengal . The Terai
160-471: Is a relict of Drishadvati river flowing from Kaithal to Hisar district, passing through the towns of Jind, Hansi , Hisar , largest Indus Valley civilization site of Rakhigarhi and ancient Agroha Mound . Drishadvati river itself was a tributary of the Ghaggar-Hakra River. List of films , Chandrawal , Jagat Jakhar ) Siwalik Hills The Sivalik Hills , also known as Churia Hills , are
200-587: Is crossed by the large perennial Himalayan rivers Yamuna, Ganges, Sarda , Karnali , Narayani and Kosi that have each built alluvial fans covering thousands of square kilometres below their exits from the hills. Medium rivers such as the Rapti rise in the Mahabharat Range . The geological structure of the region consists of old and new alluvium , both of which constitute alluvial deposits of mainly sand, clay , silt , gravels and coarse fragments. The new alluvium
240-515: Is increasing and causing sociocultural changes in the region. Since the early 1950s, several political parties advocated for autonomy and independence of the Nepal Terai, such as the Nepal Terai Congress and Janatantrik Terai Mukti Morcha . Several armed groups were formed, which pursued this aim using violent means. In 2013, more than 24 Madheshi political parties were registered for
280-573: Is part of the Terai-Duar savanna and grasslands ecoregion . Nepal's Terai stretches over 33,998.8 km (13,127.0 sq mi), about 23.1% of Nepal's land area, and lies at an elevation of between 67 and 300 m (220 and 984 ft). The region comprises more than 50 wetlands . North of the Terai rises the Bhabar , a narrow but continuous belt of forest about 8–12 km (5.0–7.5 mi) wide. The Urdu word ترائی tarāʼī means "lands lying at
320-503: Is renewed every year by fresh deposits brought down by active streams, which engage themselves in fluvial action . Old alluvium is found rather away from river courses, especially on uplands of the plain where silting is a rare phenomenon. A large number of small and usually seasonal rivers flow through the Terai, most of which originate in the Sivalik Hills. The soil in the Terai is alluvial and fine to medium textured. Forest cover in
360-585: Is the most productive region in Nepal with the majority of the country's industries. Agriculture is the basis of the economy. Major crops include rice , wheat , maize , potato , peas , lentil , mustard , sugar cane , ginger , turmeric , cardamom , garlic and chili . Fruits comprise mango , lychee , guava , papaya , banana and jackfruit . The Terai is also known for beekeeping and honey production, with about 120,000 colonies of Apis cerana . In Jhapa District, tea has been cultivated since 1960;
400-493: The 2008 Bihar flood . In India, the Terai extends over the states of Haryana, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal. These are mostly the districts of these states that are on the India–Nepal border : The Inner Terai Valleys of Nepal consists of five elongated valleys located between the lower Himalayan Range and Sivalik Hills . From north-west to south-east these valleys are: The Outer Terai begins south of
440-624: The Brahmaputra River , spanning the northern parts of the Indian subcontinent . It is 10–50 km (6.2–31.1 mi) wide with an average elevation of 1,500–2,000 m (4,900–6,600 ft). Between the Teesta and Raidāk Rivers in Assam is a gap of about 90 km (56 mi). They are well known for their Neogene and Pleistocene aged vertebrate fossils. Geologically, the Sivalik Hills belong to
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#1732852743218480-613: The Constituent Assembly of Nepal election. The most significant border dispute of the Indo-Nepal boundary in the Terai region is the Susta area. In the Susta region, 14,500 hectares of land is under dispute but recent development has manage to discuss it bilaterally. After the 2008 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election , Indian politicians kept on trying to secure strategic interests in
520-531: The Middle Pleistocene , around 18 million to 600,000 years ago. Some of the best known fossils from the hills include Megalochelys atlas , the largest known tortoise to have ever existed, Sivatherium giganteum , the largest known giraffid , and the ape Sivapithecus . Remains of the Lower - Middle Paleolithic Soanian culture dating to around 500,000 to 125,000 years Before Present were found in
560-613: The Tertiary deposits of the outer Himalayas. They are chiefly composed of sandstone and conglomerate rock formations, which are the solidified detritus of the Himalayas to their north; they are poorly consolidated. The sedimentary rocks comprising the hills are believed to be 16–5.2 million years old. They are bounded on the south by a fault system called the Main Frontal Thrust, with steeper slopes on that side. Below this,
600-452: The indigenous inhabitants of the Terai forests. Several Tharu subgroups are scattered over most of the Nepal and Indian Terai. They used to be semi-nomadic, practised shifting cultivation and collected wild fruits, vegetables and medicinal herbs . They have been living in the Terai for many centuries and reputedly had an innate resistance to malaria . Dhimal reside in the eastern Nepal Terai, viz Sunsari, Morang and Jhapa Districts. In
640-531: The unification of Nepal . Until the mid 18th century, the Nepal Terai was divided into several smaller kingdoms, and the forests and wild places were, largely, left undisturbed. Since the late 18th century, however, the Shah rulers encouraged Indians to settle in the Terai, and supported famine-stricken Bihari farmers in efforts to convert to a more productive agricultural lifestyle in the eastern Nepal Terai. From at least 1786 onward, they appointed government officers in
680-486: The Himalayan foothills and gained control over the region from Kashmir to the eastern Terai during the following three centuries. By the 16th century, the rulers of Palpa and Makwanpur controlled the mid-western Terai and extended this control to the eastern Terai by the 17th century. They controlled the area of today's districts of Saptari , Siraha, Dhanusa , Mahottari and Sarlahi. The rulers of Makwanpur controlled
720-740: The Nepal Terai (called ' Naya Muluk ', or ‘new country’) lay on the northern periphery of the Awadh dynasty. After Nepal lost the Anglo–Nepalese War of 1816, the British annexed these regions of the Terai when the Sugauli Treaty was ratified; as a reward for Nepal's military aid in the Indian Rebellion of 1857 , they returned some of this region in 1860, namely today's districts of Kanchanpur, Kailali, Banke and Bardiya. To promote economic development of
760-517: The Nepal Terai, distribution and value of land determine economic hierarchy to a large extent. High caste migrants from the hills and traditional Tharu landlords who own agriculturally productive land constitute the upper level of the economic hierarchy. The poor are the landless or near landless Terai Dalits , including the Musahar , Chamar and Mallaah . Several Chepang people also live in Nepal's central and eastern Terai districts. As of June 2011,
800-410: The Nepal Terai, people from the hills were invited to settle in the region. Since only a few moved to the Terai, Indian people were further encouraged to settle. Immigration of Indian people increased between 1846 and 1950. They settled in the eastern Nepal Terai, living in close proximity with native Terai peoples. The Indian Terai remained largely uninhabited until the end of the 19th century, as it
840-430: The Nepal Terai, such as over hydropower energy, development projects, business and trade. The government of Nepal has accused India of imposing an undeclared blockade in 2015 but it is not clear yet, local peoples blame Nepal administration and government. Dhurmus Suntali Foundation handed over an integrated community containing 50 houses to Musahar community of Bardibas at a cost of Rs. 63 million. The Terai
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#1732852743218880-750: The Sivalik Hills and extends to the Indo-Gangetic Plain . In the Far-Western Region, Nepal , it comprises the Kanchanpur and Kailali Districts; in the Mid-Western Region, Nepal , Bardiya and Banke Districts . Further east, the Outer Terai comprises the Kapilvastu , Rupandehi , Nawalparasi , Parsa , Bara , Rautahat , Sarlahi , Mahottari , Dhanusa , Siraha, Saptari, Sunsari , Morang and Jhapa Districts . Several protected areas were established in
920-805: The Sivalik region. Contemporary to the Acheulean , the Soanian culture is named after the Soan Valley in the Sivalik Hills of Pakistan . The Soanian archaeological culture is found across Sivalik region in present-day India, Nepal and Pakistan. The carbon stock and carbon sequestration rates of the Churia forests differ among different forest management regimes and are highest in protected areas. 27°46′N 82°24′E / 27.767°N 82.400°E / 27.767; 82.400 Terai The Terai or Tarai
960-457: The Terai and hill areas has decreased at an annual rate of 1.3% between 1978 and 1979, and 2.3% between 1990 and 1991. With deforestation and cultivation increasing, a permeable mixture of gravel, boulders and sand evolves, which leads to a sinking water table . But where layers consist of clay and fine sediments, the groundwater rises to the surface and heavy sediment is washed out, thus enabling frequent and massive floods during monsoon , such as
1000-399: The Terai before November 1 or after June 1." British travelers to Kathmandu went as fast as possible from the border at Raxaul to reach the hills before nightfall. Malaria was eradicated using DDT in the mid-1950s, at the unfortunate expense of future generations of birds, especially vultures, which were especially sensitive to the chemical. Subsequently, people from the hills migrated to
1040-461: The Terai jungles were teaming with wildlife. Inner Terai valleys historically were agriculturally productive but extremely malarial. Some parts were left forested by official decree during the Rana dynasty as a defensive perimeter called Char Kose Jhadi , meaning 'four kos forest'; one kos equals about 3 km (1.9 mi). A British observer noted, "Plainsmen and paharis generally die if they sleep in
1080-467: The Terai since the late 1950s: Based on the Köppen–Geiger climate classification system , the Nepal Terai experiences a tropical savanna climate type with dry winters and hot summers, a mean annual temperature of 20–28 °C (68–82 °F), a mean annual rainfall of 1,600–1,800 mm (63–71 in) in the west and 2,500–3,000 mm (98–118 in) in the east. Tharu and Dhimal people are
1120-589: The Terai. About 16,000 Tibetan refugees settled in the Nepal Terai in 1959–1960, followed by refugees of Nepali origin from Burma in 1964, from Nagaland and Mizoram in the late 1960s, and about 10,000 Bihari Muslims from Bangladesh in the 1970s. Timber export continued until 1969. In 1970, King Mahendra granted land to loyal ex-army personnel in the districts of Jhapa, Sunsari, Rupandehi and Banke Districts, where seven colonies were developed for resettling about 7,000 people. They acquired property rights over uncultivated forest and 'waste' land, thus accelerating
1160-614: The annual production of 2005 was estimated at 10.1 million kg. The Mahendra Highway crosses the Nepal Terai from Kankarbhitta on the eastern border in Jhapa District, Province No. 1 to Mahendranagar near the western border in Kanchanpur District, Mahakali Zone . It is the only motor road spanning the country from east to west. Tea cultivation was introduced in the Darjeeling Terai in 1862. Tourist attractions in
1200-555: The central Terai region of present-day Nepal, and the rulers of Vijayapur controlled today's Sunsari, Morang and Jhapa Districts. The Shah dynasty conquered the eastern Nepal Terai in the 1770s. They also conquered land in the eastern Terai that belonged to the Kingdom of Sikkim . The Tulsipur State , in the Dang Valley of Nepal's western Terai, was also an independent kingdom until it was conquered in 1785 by Bahadur Shah of Nepal during
1240-402: The central and western Terai. Bantawa people reside foremost in two districts of the eastern Terai in Nepal. Following the malaria eradication program using DDT in the 1960s, a large and heterogeneous non-Tharu population settled in the Nepal Terai. Pahari people from the mid-hills including Bahun , Chhetri and Newar moved to the plains in search of arable land. In the rural parts of
Chautang - Misplaced Pages Continue
1280-564: The coarse alluvial Bhabar zone makes the transition to the nearly level plains. Rainfall, especially during the summer monsoon , percolates into the Bhabar, then is forced to the surface by finer alluvial layers below it in a zone of springs and marshes along the northern edge of the Terai or plains. The Sivalik Hills are well known for fossils of vertebrates, spanning from the Early Miocene , until
1320-418: The deforestation process in the Terai. Between 1961 and 1991, the annual population growth in the Terai was higher than the national average, which indicates that migration from abroad occurred at a large scale. Deforestation continued, and forest products from state-owned forest were partly smuggled to India. Community forestry was introduced in 1995. Since the 1990s, migration from the Terai to urban centres
1360-407: The eastern Terai districts of Parsa, Bara, Rautahat, Mahottari, Saptari and Morang to levy taxes, collect revenues and maintain civil order, as well as to hunt wild game, including Indian elephants and Indian rhinoceros , mostly for their ivory. At the end of the 18th century, between 200 and 300 elephants were caught annually, using snares or nooses. The far-western and mid-western regions of
1400-475: The foot of a watershed" or "on the banks of a river; low ground flooded with water, valley, basin, marshy ground, marsh, swamp; meadow". In Hindi , the region is called तराई 'tarāī' meaning "foot-hill". In Nepali , the region is called तराइ 'tarāi' meaning "the low-lying land, plain" and especially "the low-lying land at the foot of the Himālayas". It has been described as "low, marshy ground". The Terai
1440-486: The human population in the Nepal Terai totalled 13,318,705 people in 2,527,558 households comprising more than 120 different ethnic groups and castes such as Badi , Chamling , Ghale , Kumal , Limbu , Magar , Muslim , Rajbanshi , Teli , Thakuri , Yadav and Majhi speaking people. The Muslim invasion of northern India during the 14th century forced Hindu and Buddhist people to seek refuge from religious persecution. Rajput nobles and their entourage migrated to
1480-570: The past, they lived in the fringes of the forest and conducted a semi-nomadic life to evade outbreaks of diseases. Today, they are subsistence farmers. The Bhoksa people are indigenous to the western Terai in the Indian Kumaon division . Maithils inhabit the Indian Terai in Bihar and the eastern Terai in Nepal. Bhojpuri people reside in the central and eastern Terai, and Awadhi people live in
1520-460: The peasants of several taxes and providing them many facilities. He took out a canal from the Yamuna which entered the district at Anta (tahsil Safidon ) and thence flowing through the present Jind District from east to west in the line of the old Chautang river passing the town of Safidon, Dhatrath and Jind and reached Hisar. This branch was built in the paleochannel of seasonal Chautang river which
1560-554: Was arduous and dangerous to penetrate the dense marsh - and malaria -filled jungle with its predators. Dacoit gangs retreated to the Terai jungles, and the area was considered lawless and wild by the British, who sought control of the region's valuable timber reserves. The region was densely forested with stands of foremost Sal . Heavy logging began in the 1920s. Extracted timber was exported to India to collect revenues. Cleared areas were subsequently used for agriculture. But still,
1600-580: Was one of the main contributors to this river system until the Yamuna changed its course. However, according to Giosan, the Chautang is a rain-fed river, and the Yamuna changed its course towards east some 50,000 to 10,000 years ago, and didn't pour any water into it for the last 10,000 years. Hansi Branch of Western Yamuna Canal is palaeochannel of this river. Firuz Tughluq ( A.D. 1351-1388) did not do what his predecessors had done. He reduced land revenue, exempted
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