Concepts

Indian Desert (Thar)

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectGeography

Definition

The Thar or Great Indian Desert, an arid sandy region in the north-west of India lying largely in western Rajasthan, west of the Aravalli Range.

Key points

  • Lies mainly in Rajasthan and extends into Gujarat, Punjab, and Haryana, and across the border into Pakistan; it is the world's most densely populated desert.
  • Receives less than about 150 mm of rain a year; the climate is hot and dry with high diurnal and seasonal temperature ranges.
  • The Aravalli Range lies parallel to the path of the south-west monsoon and so fails to obstruct or lift the moisture-bearing winds, which is one reason the region stays arid.
  • Landforms include sand dunes (barchans and longitudinal dunes), inland drainage, and ephemeral streams; the Luni is the only sizeable river, ending in the Rann of Kutch.
  • The Indira Gandhi Canal (Rajasthan Canal), drawing Sutlej-Beas water, has greened parts of the desert for agriculture.

Why it matters for CAPF

The location relative to the Aravallis, the rain-shadow style aridity, the Luni river, the Indira Gandhi Canal, and the security significance of the Rajasthan-Gujarat desert frontier (BSF deployment) are recurring facts.

Common confusion

The Aravallis do not block the monsoon because they run roughly parallel to the wind direction; the Luni is the only major river and drains into the Rann of Kutch, not to the sea proper.

One-line recall

Arid Thar Desert of western Rajasthan, under 150 mm rain, the Luni its only river, greened in parts by the Indira Gandhi Canal.

Parent note

india physiography

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