Geography ยท Chapter 08

๐Ÿชจ Natural Resources

Soils, minerals, water resources, and energy.

๐Ÿชจ India's Natural Wealth

Natural resources are things in the environment that are useful to humans โ€” minerals, water, soil, forests, and fossil fuels. India is rich in many resources but faces challenges in their sustainable use.

Types of natural resources:
โ€ข Renewable: Solar, wind, water, forests (if managed sustainably)
โ€ข Non-renewable: Coal, petroleum, natural gas, minerals โ€” once used, gone

Soil types of India (6 major types):

1. Alluvial soil โ€” most widespread, most fertile. Ganga plains, coastal areas. Khadar and Bhangar types. Best for wheat, rice, sugarcane.
2. Black soil (Regur) โ€” Deccan plateau, Maharashtra, AP, MP. Excellent for cotton (holds moisture). Self-ploughing โ€” cracks in dry season.
3. Red and Yellow soil โ€” Eastern Ghats, Deccan plateau (UP, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh). Low fertility, iron oxide gives red colour.
4. Laterite soil โ€” Kerala, TN, Karnataka hills, Assam, Odisha. High iron content, poor for crops but good for tea and coffee.
5. Arid/Desert soil โ€” Rajasthan. Sandy, low moisture, low organic matter.
6. Forest soil โ€” Himalayan and other forest regions. Rich humus, suitable for orchards.

โ›๏ธ Major minerals of India

โ€ข Iron Ore โ€” Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka. India has 4th largest reserves. Main mines: Singhbhum (Jharkhand), Bellary (Karnataka), Bailadila (CG).
โ€ข Coal โ€” Jharkhand (Jharia = largest coal field), WB (Raniganj = oldest), MP, Odisha. India has 3rd largest coal reserves globally.
โ€ข Manganese โ€” Odisha, Karnataka, MP. Used in steel making.
โ€ข Mica โ€” Jharkhand, Rajasthan, AP. India = world's largest mica producer. Used in electronics.
โ€ข Bauxite (Aluminium ore) โ€” Odisha, Jharkhand, Gujarat, Maharashtra.
โ€ข Copper โ€” Rajasthan (Khetri = largest copper mine), Jharkhand.

Wheat fields in Punjab โ€” India's breadbasket
Wheat fields in Punjab โ€” India's breadbasketWikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
Tea gardens, Darjeeling โ€” India's finest tea
Tea gardens, Darjeeling โ€” India's finest teaWikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
๐Ÿ›ข๏ธ Petroleum and energy

โ€ข Petroleum: Digboi (Assam, 1867 โ€” oldest oil field), Mumbai High (offshore, largest), Rajasthan (Barmer, recent), Gujarat (Ankleshwar).
โ€ข Natural Gas: Mumbai High, Bay of Bengal (Krishna-Godavari basin โ€” KG-D6 field by Reliance), Rajasthan.
โ€ข India imports ~85% of its crude oil โ€” major economic burden.
โ€ข Renewable energy: India is world's 3rd largest solar energy producer. Target: 500 GW renewable by 2030. Solar parks: Bhadla (Rajasthan, world's largest), Pavagada (Karnataka).

๐ŸŽฌ

India's Mineral Map

Animation
INDIA'S MINERAL RESOURCES โ€” CLICK TO EXPLORE โšซ Coal ๐Ÿ”ด Iron Ore โœจ Mica ๐Ÿ›ข๏ธ Petroleum ๐ŸŸ  Copper ๐ŸŸก Bauxite Digboi Mumbai High Bhadla Solar MINERAL BELT โšซ Coal โ€” Jharkhand (Jharia) ๐Ÿ”ด Iron โ€” Odisha/Jharkhand โœจ Mica โ€” Jharkhand/RJ ๐Ÿ›ข๏ธ Oil โ€” Rajasthan/Assam ๐ŸŸ  Copper โ€” Rajasthan ๐ŸŸก Bauxite โ€” Odisha/JH โ˜€๏ธ Solar โ€” Rajasthan Mineral Triangle: Jharkhand-Odisha-CG CLICK A MINERAL MARKER India's mineral wealth is concentrated in the "Mineral Triangle" โ€” Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh.

Jharkhand, Odisha, and Chhattisgarh form India's mineral heartland โ€” rich but economically underdeveloped.

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ

Soil Types โ€” Quick Reference

Interactive
Found inGanga plains, Brahmaputra valley, coastal areas
FormationDeposited by Himalayan rivers over millennia
Best forWheat, Rice, Sugarcane, Maize (most crops)
Special propertyHigh fertility, renews annually from river deposits
Most widespread and most fertile soil in India. About 43% of India's total land area. Khadar (new alluvium) is more fertile than Bhangar (old alluvium).
Practice (NCERT): Why is black soil best for growing cotton?
Black soil (also called Regur soil or "cotton soil") is best for cotton because:

1. Moisture retention: Black soil has very high water-holding capacity due to fine clay particles. Cotton needs consistent moisture during its growing period โ€” black soil provides this naturally.

2. Self-ploughing: When dry, black soil develops deep cracks โ€” allowing air and water to penetrate deep into the soil. This "self-ploughing" action improves aeration.

3. Rich in minerals: Black soil contains calcium carbonate, magnesium, potash, and lime โ€” nutrients that cotton needs for boll development.

4. Formation: Formed from lava rock (basalt) of the Deccan plateau โ€” volcanic origin makes it mineral-rich.

Found in: Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh โ€” exactly where cotton is grown most. Also good for jowar, wheat, gram, sunflower.
Practice (NCERT): What is soil erosion? What causes it and how can it be prevented?
Soil erosion is the removal of the top layer of soil by wind, water, or human activity. India loses ~16.35 tonnes/hectare/year to erosion โ€” one of the worst rates in the world.

Causes:
โ€ข Deforestation โ€” tree roots hold soil; bare land erodes quickly
โ€ข Overgrazing โ€” cattle eat grass, exposing soil
โ€ข Heavy rainfall โ€” especially on slopes (splash erosion, sheet erosion, gully erosion)
โ€ข Wind erosion in arid areas (Rajasthan, Haryana)
โ€ข Improper farming โ€” ploughing along slopes instead of contour

Prevention:
โ€ข Contour ploughing โ€” plough along hill contours (not down slope) to trap water
โ€ข Terrace farming โ€” step-like terraces on hill slopes (common in NE India)
โ€ข Strip cropping โ€” alternate strips of crops and grass to break wind/water flow
โ€ข Shelter belts โ€” plant trees in rows to break wind (used in Rajasthan)
โ€ข Afforestation โ€” plant trees on bare land
โ€ข Check dams โ€” small dams to slow water flow and trap sediment
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