Himalayas Terai Valley, Nepal by Asiatravel.com
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In
Nepal, Terai is differentiated into "outer" and "inner" Terai.
Outer Terai begins at the alluvial, generally forested and often marshy zone along the southern edge of the ~700 metre
Siwalik Range -- the first and lowest range of
Himalayan foothills. In Nepalese usage Terai extends to the border with
India and includes drier, mostly cleared agricultural land below the marshes.
Indian usage is more tied to hydrology and ecology. In some places the wetter ecoregion extends kilometers south of the Nepal border into
India.
Most of the local population is ethnically Indian, natively speaking Hindi and dialects such as
Awadhi, Bhojpuri and
Maithili. They were largely disenfranchised during the
Shah and
Rana regimes that were largely administered by and for
Paharis. This discrimination gave rise to political movements seeking greater representation.
Major towns of the Outer Terai (east to west):
Bhadrapur and
Mechinagar in
Mechi Zone
Biratnagar Inaruwa and
Itahari in
Koshi Zone
Lahan and
Rajbiraj in
Sagarmatha Zone
Janakpur in
Janakpur Zone
Birgunj in
Narayani Zone
Butwal and
Siddharthanagar (Bhairahawa) in
Lumbini Zone
Nepalganj in
Bheri Zone
Dhangadhi in
Seti Zone
Mahendranagar in
Mahakali Zone
Inner Terai refers to elongated valleys lying between the Siwalik Range and the 2-3,000 metre
Mahabharat Range further north. In India these valleys are called "
Duns", e.g.
Dehra Dun. Most of these valleys extend east-west or SSE-WNW parallel to enclosing ranges. They are five to ten kilometers wide and up to a hundred kilometers long.
Inner Terai valleys historically were agriculturally productive but extremely malarial.
Indigenous Tharu people had a degree of inherited resistance and populated these areas. A malaria eradication campaign opened the Inner Terai to settlers from the "hills" to the north and from neighbouring India, to the detriment of indigenous peoples.
Important towns in the Inner Terai are:
Triyuga in
Kamala
Kamalamai in
Marin Khola
Bharatpur (Narayangadh),
Hetauda, and
Tandi in
Chitwan
Tulsipur and
Tribhuvannagar (
Ghorahi) in Dang
Birendranagar in
Surkhet.
Wetter, more malarial parts of the Terai were left forested by official decree during the
Rana dynasty as a defensive perimeter called Char
Kose Jhadi (four kos forest, one kos equalling about three km or two miles).
Mahendra Highway crosses the Nepal Terai from
Kakarbhitta on the eastern border in
Jhapa District, Mechi Zone to Mahendranagar near the western border in
Kanchanpur District, Mahakali Zone. It is the only motor road spanning the country from east to west.
Major cities like Bharatpur, Biratnagar,
Bhairawa, Birgunj are well connected with airports. The most interesting places to visit are
Lumbini, considered to be the birth place of
Buddha;
Bardia National Park,
Chitwan National Park
Janakpur - the birthplace of
Sita, where she married
Rama, described in the epic
Ramayana.
Info Taken from
Wikipedia.com
Credits to Wikipedia.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terai