city, northern Maharashtra state, western India. It lies along the Bombay-Nagpur road and the Bombay-Allahabad railway. Although insignificant before the 19th century, it then attracted merchants and weavers so that it could boast of more than 400 handlooms by 1860. From the late 1800s it grew steadily, and it is now one of the chief commercial centres of the Khandesh cotton-growing region. It also has colleges affiliated with the University of Poona. The surrounding area occupies the Tapti River valley on the northern rim of the Deccan Plateau. To the north lies the Satpura Range of the Western Ghats, with peaks rising to 3,500 feet (1,000 m). The hills descend steeply to the Tapti River, the fast-flowing tributaries of which have deeply dissected the terrain, creating a typical badland landscape. South of the T apti, the land is gently undulating and rises gradually to the Ajanta Range, 600 feet (180 m) above the river basin. The region is important as a part of the Khandesh cotton belt; millet and oilseeds are also grown. Irrigation projects on the Tapti, Bori, and Girna rivers were begun in the mid-1970s to alleviate the pressures of a seasonal and scanty rainfall. Local industries include cotton mills and artificial silk, thread, and fireworks factories. Pop. (1991 prelim.) city, 241,603.
JALGAON
Meaning of JALGAON in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012