Region | Northeast India |
---|---|
Area | |
• Total | 83,743[1] km2 (32,333 sq mi) |
• Land | 98.09% |
• Water | 1.91% |
Borders | Bhutan, China, Burma, Assam, Nagaland |
Highest point | Kangto, 7,060 metres (23,160 ft) |
Lowest point | ~50 metres (160 ft)[2] |
Natural resources | Hydro-power
Forest cover: 79.63% (2019)[1]
|
Arunachal Pradesh is primarily a hilly tract nestled in the foothills of the Himalayas in northeast India. It is spread over an area of 83,743 km2 (32,333 sq mi).[3] 98% of the geographical area is land out of which 80% is forest cover;[1] 2% is water.[4] River systems in the region, including those from the higher Himalayas and Patkoi and Arakan Ranges, eventually drain into the Brahmaputra River.[5]
Elevation ranges from mountains that are above 7,000 metres (23,000 ft),[6] to the towns in the plains with an elevation of less than 300 metres (980 ft).[7] Arunachal shares international borders with Bhutan, Tibet (China) and Burma (Myanmar). Internally, Arunachal borders the states of Assam and Nagaland. Arunachal is called the "orchid state of India"[8][9] and "dawn-lit mountain/Land of Dawn/Land of Dawn-Lit Mountains".[10][11]
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We may as well call Arunachal a flowery paradise. Arunachal is also called Orchid State of India
The biodiversity rich North-East States in India are endowed with over 870 species in 159 genera constituting over 73% of the total Orchid species reported from India. Arunachal Pradesh has the highest number of orchid species (around 622 species) reported from the state. Arunachal Pradesh has also been termed as 'Orchid Paradise of India' because of the maximum concentration of orchid species (about 40% of the country) in the State.