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The North-East
The Himalayan wall, which runs due
east-west from Sikkim through Bhutan, bends north-east
culminating in the Namcha Barwa (7,755m). It is possible
that the Himalayan fold systems extend eastwards into
China. However, there is a sharp contrast in tectonic
structure west and east of the Dihang-Brahmaputra gorge:
south-west/north-east in the NEFA and distinctly north-south
further east. This is expressed by a succession of ranges
trending south along the Indo-Myanmar border.
The first section of mountain barrier
between India and China, east of the Dihang Gorge, is
the Mishmi Hills with a high point at Kadusam (5,106m).
Drained by the Dihang and Lohit rivers, the area is
rugged with dense forest. Then follow the Patkai, Naga,
Chin, and Arakan Ranges along the Indo-Myanmar border.
These form the great Arakan arc made up of tightly packed
parallel ridges and valleys with trellis drainage patterns.
Geologically, they are of Mesozoic formation in Arakan,
Tertiary in the Naga hills, and Precambrian further
north. The ridges rarely exceed 2,000 metres, although
some peaks in the Chin, Naga, and Patkai Ranges exceed
3,000 m, the highest being Dalpha Bum (4,578m).
The area is mostly hilly and mountainous.
With monsoon rainfall exceeding 2,000 mm, the ranges
have dense vegetation of tropical evergreen and deciduous
species. The people are a mosaic of Mongoloid tribes.
Their villages tend to concentrate on ridge tops to
avoid malarial valleys and for defence. Shifting cultivation,
known as jhum or taungya (mountain field), is common
for cultivating upland rice, maize, and millet with
the aid of dibble sticks. Forest products, such as bamboo,
honey, wax, and lac, are sources of supplementary income.
Lying on the frontier of India and Myanmar, these lands
once harboured raiding parties of rival head-hunters.
Such rivalries have been superseded now by conflicts
over ethnic nationalism (Lintner1996).
The Assam Plateau, more appropriately
Meghalaya (Abode of Clouds), is a detached block of
the Peninsula beyond the Ganges-Brahmaputra plain. It
is formed mainly of pre-Cambrian crystalline rocks with
granite intrusions. It extends 240km east-west with
an average elevation of 1,830m. Its south flank of sandstones
presents a steep slope scoured by the highest rainfall
in the world (10,800 mm). Northwards are fragmented
outliers of the Mikir and Rangma hills. The plateau
is densely forested, although the lower ridges have
been converted to secondary woodland through centuries
of shifting cultivation. The main crops are maize and
upland rice along with potatoes and oranges as cash
crops. The people belong to the Garo, Khasi, and Jaintia
tribes that speak Mon-Khmer or Tibeto-Burman languages.
A matrilineal society persists despite exposure to missionary
influence.
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