Palani Hills
The Palani Hills
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| Students at AC& RI Madurai |
The Palani Hills (பழனி மலை)
(also Palani Hills) are a mountain range in Tamil
Nadu state of South India. The Palani Hills are an eastward extension
of the Western Ghats ranges, which run parallel to the west coast of
India. The Palani Hills adjoin the high Anamalai range on the west,
and extend east into the plains of Tamil Nadu, covering an area of 2,068 square
kilometres (798 sq mi). The highest part of the range is in the
southwest, and reaches 1,800-2,500 metres (5,906-8,202 feet) elevation; the
eastern extension of the range is made up of hills 1,000-1,500 m
(3,281-4,921 ft) high.
It is also home to one of the shrines of Lord Karthikeyan
or Murugan, who is worshipped as the primary god in Tamil Nadu
Geography
The range
lies between the Cumbum Valley on the south, which is drained by
the Vaigai River and its upper tributaries, and
the Kongunadu region to the north. The northern slopes are drained by
the Shanmukha River, Nanganji River, and Kodavanar River, which are tributaries
of the Kaveri River. The range lies mostly within Dindigul district,
except in the western portion, where it forms the boundary between Dindigul
district and Theni district to the south. The hill
station of Kodaikanal lies in the southern central portion of
the range.
Ecoregions
The lower elevations of the Palani Hills,
between 250 and 1,000 m (820-3,281 ft), are part of the South Western
Ghats moist deciduous forests ecoregion. Above 1,000 m (3,281 ft),
the deciduous forests transition to the evergreen South
Western Ghats montane rain forests. In the highest portions of the range, above
2,000 m (6,562 ft), the montane rainforests give way
to shola-grassland mosaic, made up of frost-tolerant montane
grasslands interspersed with pockets of stunted shola forests.
Conservation
The
Palani Hills are currently subject to increasing development pressure. The
Palni Hills Conservation Council, a non-governmental
organizationheadquartered in Kodaikanal, was founded in 1985. In the early
1990s the Tamil Nadu Forest Department proposed to the Tamil Nadu
state government that much of the range be granted protected status as a
wildlife sanctuary or Palani Hills Wildlife Sanctuary and National Park.
Source:wiki



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