The nearest is the Indian ocean.
The four natural barriers that separate India from the rest of Asia are the Himalayas to the north, the Hindu Kush mountains to the northwest, the Indian Ocean to the south, and the Thar Desert to the west.
No, tsunamis are large ocean waves typically caused by underwater earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, and they cannot reach the Himalayas as they are too far inland. The Himalayas are a mountain range located in South Asia, far from the coastlines where tsunamis occur.
the average hieght of the upper himalayas is about 6000 metres the average height of the middle himalayas is about 4000 metres the average height of the lower himalayas is about 2000 metres
The three major divisions of the Himalayas from north to south are: Ø The Great Himalayas/Inner Himalayas/Himadri(Northernmost division). Ø The Lesser Himalayas/Himachal Ø The Shiwaliks (Southernmost division).
No. They can occur in any body of water, and are actually more common in the Pacific. It is only that the worst tsunami in living memory occurred in the Indian Ocean. The Pacific actually had a tsunami warning system decades before the Indian Ocean did.
Yes. There are many glaciers in the Himalayas.
Indian ocean bay of Bengal Himalayas counries
no
Indian Ocean is the geographical barrier between India and Africa .
The Indus River begins in Tibet and flows south through much of Pakistan before reaching the Arabian Sea (arm of the Indian Ocean).
yes
i live there
two natural land barriers in china are the Himalayas and the pacific ocean. if u are going for a third try the Gobi desert
No, but there are fossils in the Himalayas. The mountains of the Himalayas are partly formed from the sediments laid down at the bottom of an ocean. When India was moved into collision with Asia some of the intervening sediments were squeezed between the two and pushed onto the continent.
any thing they can find
It depends on what you mean by larger or smaller. The ridge is much longer than the Himalayas, but does not rise as high above the surrounding terrain.
Kangchenjunga is a mountain many kilometres inland in the Himalayas on the Nepalese-Indian border.