Geological Evolution of the Indian Subcontinent
India’s geology records 3.2+ billion years of Earth history, from ancient cratons to active orogeny. Its present shape results from supercontinent cycles, plate drift, collision, and subsequent erosion–deposition. Understanding this evolution explains Himalayas, rivers, soils, minerals, earthquakes, and hence India’s environment and economy.
Evolutionary Stages
Precambrian Foundation: Indian Shield
- Ancient cratons like Dharwar, Bundelkhand, Singhbhum, Aravalli form the stable Peninsular Shield.
- Composed mainly of gneiss, schists, greenstones, rich in iron, manganese, gold and other minerals.
- Extremely old rocks created a rigid basement, resisting later deformation compared to younger northern regions.
Gondwana Supercontinent Phase
- India was part of Gondwana with Africa, Antarctica, ....
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Geography Of India
- 1 India’s Strategic Location in the Global and Regional Contexts
- 2 India’s Geological Uniqueness: Some Salient Aspects
- 3 Peninsular Block, Himalayan Region, and Indo-Gangetic Plains: Comparative Features
- 4 Major Physiographic Divisions of India
- 5 Coastal and Desert Landforms of India
- 6 Origin and Characteristics of Major River Systems
- 7 Integrated River Basin Governance
- 8 Interlinking of Rivers and their Ecological-Economic Trade-offs
- 9 Groundwater Stress Mapping
- 10 Urban Flooding and Drainage Mapping

