Concepts

Iron Ore Belts of India

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectGeography

Definition

The major regions where India's high-grade iron ore is mined, concentrated in the Peninsular plateau States and supplying the country's iron and steel industry.

Key points

  • India has large reserves of iron ore, mostly haematite (high iron content) and magnetite; ore is found chiefly in the old Peninsular rocks.
  • Odisha-Jharkhand belt: high-grade haematite in the Singhbhum (Jharkhand) and Mayurbhanj-Kendujhar-Bonai (Odisha) region, India's richest.
  • Durg-Bastar-Chandrapur belt: in Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra, with the famous Bailadila range in Chhattisgarh, much of whose ore is exported through Visakhapatnam.
  • Ballari-Chitradurga-Tumakuru belt in Karnataka (including Kudremukh, a magnetite deposit), and the Maharashtra-Goa belt (lower-grade ore).
  • The location of iron ore near coal (the Chota Nagpur region) is a key reason the iron and steel industry clustered in eastern India.

Why it matters for CAPF

The named belts and States, the haematite-magnetite distinction, the Bailadila and Kudremukh deposits, and the iron-coal proximity behind steel-plant location are recurring minerals facts.

Common confusion

Haematite (reddish, high iron content, most used in India) versus magnetite (black, highest iron content, as at Kudremukh). The richest belt is the Odisha-Jharkhand belt, not Karnataka.

One-line recall

Iron ore from four Peninsular belts (Odisha-Jharkhand richest, plus Durg-Bastar, Karnataka, Maharashtra-Goa); mostly haematite, located near coal.

Parent note

minerals and energy resources of india

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