Concepts

Deccan Traps

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectGeography

Definition

A vast region of layered basaltic lava flows in west-central India, formed by massive volcanic eruptions near the end of the Cretaceous, that gives the Deccan its stepped topography and black cotton soil.

Key points

  • Formed by enormous fissure (flood) eruptions of fluid basaltic lava about 66 million years ago, around the Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary, as India drifted over the Reunion hotspot.
  • The word "trap" comes from a Scandinavian term for "step", reflecting the step-like (terraced) hills produced by successive horizontal lava sheets.
  • Cover a large part of Maharashtra, with extensions into Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Karnataka; once far more extensive before erosion.
  • Weather into the fertile black cotton soil (regur), which is clayey and moisture-retentive and ideal for cotton.
  • The eruptions are linked in scientific debate to the mass extinction (including the dinosaurs) at the end of the Cretaceous, alongside the asteroid impact theory.

Why it matters for CAPF

The Cretaceous fissure-eruption origin, the link to black cotton soil, the stepped topography, and the States covered are recurring physical-geography and soils facts.

Common confusion

Deccan Traps are basaltic (fissure, flood basalt) volcanism, not the explosive cone-building type; "trap" means step, not a trapping of anything. The black soil is the weathering product of this basalt.

One-line recall

Cretaceous flood-basalt lava flows of the Deccan; stepped topography, source of black cotton soil.

Parent note

india physiography

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