Indore Zone 2
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Tour Brochure Printed on : 26-06
Tour Brochure Heritage & Pilgrimage Temples Tour Duration: 01 Nights / 02 Days Tentative Tour Itinerary Arrival Indore in the morning, Drive to Omkareshwar. Indore to Omkareshwar: 77 km + Omkareshwar to Maheshwar: 65 Kms. Morning arrival Indore, Meet and greet by our Company representative, Pick up from Airport/ Railway Station and drive to Omkareshwar. “Omkareshwar Jyotirlinga” Omkareshwar is a Hindu temple dedicated to God Shiva. It is one of the 12 revered Jyotirlinga shrines of Shiva. It is on an island called Mandhata or Shivapuri in the Narmada river the shape of the island is said to be like the Hindu ॐ symbol. ###( Pandit Ji Maharaj can perform Jal Abhishek and Narmada Pooja for you)### Later drive to Maheshwar- visit Rajgaddi and Rajwada A life-size statue of Rani Ahilyabai sits on a throne in the Rajgaddi within the fort complex. Also visit Day temples like Kaleshwar, Rajarajeshwara, Vithaleshwara and Ahileshwar at 1 Maheshwar Gha., Enjoy the sunset at Ghat or can opt for a boat ride too. Transfer to hotel and night stay. Day 02: Drive to Mandu, full day Sightseeing, return and night stay. Transfer to Railway Station/ Airport. Maheshwar to Mandu 40 kms + Mandu to Indore 87 kms Morning after breakfast at 09:00 AM drive to Mandu, Arrival Mandu, start with Delhi Darwaza, than the Jahaz Mahal which looks like a ship that’s about to sail. However, for centuries this ship made of stone and mortar never did. Instead, it stood floating over the twin lakes, bearing a silent witness to Mandu's long, rich and varied history. -
Ancient Hindu Rock Monuments
ISSN: 2455-2631 © November 2020 IJSDR | Volume 5, Issue 11 ANCIENT HINDU ROCK MONUMENTS, CONFIGURATION AND ARCHITECTURAL FEATURES OF AHILYA DEVI FORT OF HOLKAR DYNASTY, MAHISMATI REGION, MAHESHWAR, NARMADA VALLEY, CENTRAL INDIA Dr. H.D. DIWAN*, APARAJITA SHARMA**, Dr. S.S. BHADAURIA***, Dr. PRAVEEN KADWE***, Dr. D. SANYAL****, Dr. JYOTSANA SHARMA***** *Pt. Ravishankar Shukla University Raipur C.G. India. **Gurukul Mahila Mahavidyalaya Raipur, Pt. R.S.U. Raipur C.G. ***Govt. NPG College of Science, Raipur C.G. ****Architectural Dept., NIT, Raipur C.G. *****Gov. J. Yoganandam Chhattisgarh College, Raipur C.G. Abstract: Holkar Dynasty was established by Malhar Rao on 29th July 1732. Holkar belonging to Maratha clan of Dhangar origin. The Maheshwar lies in the North bank of Narmada river valley and well known Ancient town of Mahismati region. It had been capital of Maratha State. The fort was built by Great Maratha Queen Rajmata Ahilya Devi Holkar and her named in 1767 AD. Rani Ahliya Devi was a prolific builder and patron of Hindu Temple, monuments, Palaces in Maheshwar and Indore and throughout the Indian territory pilgrimages. Ahliya Devi Holkar ruled on the Indore State of Malwa Region, and changed the capital to Maheshwar in Narmada river bank. The study indicates that the Narmada river flows from East to west in a straight course through / lineament zone. The Fort had been constructed on the right bank (North Wards) of River. Geologically, the region is occupied by Basaltic Deccan lava flow rocks of multiple layers, belonging to Cretaceous in age. The river Narmada flows between Northwards Vindhyan hillocks and southwards Satpura hills. -
DETAILS KHARGONE 1 District Population 2,201,428 2 Total Residential Areas 1520 Villages No. of Block in District 9 No. of Nagar
COVID-19_HEALTH BULLETIN STATUS KHARGONE AS ON DATE - 25.03.2021 S.N. DETAILS KHARGONE 1 District Population 2,201,428 2 Total residential areas 1520 Villages No. of Block in District 9 No. of Nagar Nigam in District 0 3 3 No. of Nagar Palika in District 595 No. of Nagar Panchayat and Gram Panchayat in District 4 Date of first Covid-19 case 31-Mar-20 5 No. of positive case found on above date 1 6 No. of containment zone 234 7 No. survey teams deployed 235 Surveyed population of containment zone / Population of 8 48142/58466 containment zone 9 No. of Medical Mobile team 30 10 No. of Active Fever Clinics 23 11 No. of sample collection teams for COVID 19 70 12 No. of RRT/SUB RRT 37 13 No. of sample collection today 493 14 Total Sample collected Cumulative 117245 15 No. of Negative found today 348 16 No. of Negative found Cumulative 108889 17 No. of Awiated results 1327 18 No. of COVID patients discharged today 26 19 No. of COVID patients discharged Cumulative 5660 20 Percentage of discharged people 93.3 21 Total Covid 19 Active cases at present 292 22 Admission of Covid 19 Active patient 129 23 Covid 19 Active cases under Home Isolated today 163 24 Total no. of Home quarantine till today 1327 25 Positive Cases in last 24 hours 60 26 Positive Cases Cumulative 6067 27 Cumulative Positivity Rate 5.2 28 Covid Deaths in last 24 hours 1 29 No. of Death of COVID patients Cumulative 115 30 Percentage of death 1.9 DISTRICT KHARGONE : POSITIVE PATIENT LOCATIONS AS ON DATE :25.03.2021 TOTAL POSITIVE :60 Address * GRAM - REGWAN DST KHARGON MP * GORIDHAM -
33Kv & 11Kv Tripping Information.Xlsx
33KV FEEDERS HAVING MORE THAN 5 TRIPPINGS IN LAST 3 MONTHS IN WEST DISCOM No. of 33KV Feeders No. of 33KV Feeders No. of 33KV Feeders Total No. Of 33KV S.No. Circle having more than 5 having more than 5 having more than 5 Feeders Trippings in Apr-2019 Trippings in May-2019 Trippings in June-2019 1 Indore City 75 0 2 9 2 Indore O&M 122 0 0 11 3 Khandwa 46 0 0 3 4 Burhanpur 21 0 0 0 5 Khargone 71 1 0 7 6 Barwani 33 2 0 0 7 Dhar 65 1 0 7 8 Jhabua 30 0 0 4 Indore Region 463 4 2 41 9 Ujjain 110 0 0 3 10 Dewas 102 1 2 11 11 Shajapur 59 6 0 2 12 Agar 44 0 0 2 13 Ratlam 55 0 0 8 14 Mandsaur 52 1 0 4 15 Neemuch 28 0 0 2 Ujjain Region 450 8 2 32 West Discom 913 12 4 73 11KV FEEDERS HAVING MORE THAN 8 TRIPPINGS IN LAST 3 MONTHS IN WEST DISCOM No. of 11KV Feeders having No. of 11KV Feeders having No. of 11KV Feeders having Total No. Of 11KV more than 8 Trippings in more than 8 Trippings in more than 8 Trippings in June- Feeders S.No. Circle Apr-2019 May-2019 2019 Non- Non- Non- Non- Irrigation Irrigation Irrigation Irrigation Irrigation Irrigation Total Irrigation Total Irrigation Total Feeders Feeders Feeders Feeders Feeders Feeders Feeders Feeders 1 Indore City 451 2 4 0 4 2 0 2 31 0 31 2 Indore O&M 303 304 0 0 0 0 0 0 35 12 47 3 Khandwa 168 184 2 4 6 0 2 2 25 22 47 4 Burhanpur 73 102 1 2 3 0 0 0 2 4 6 5 Khargone 218 284 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 4 6 6 Barwani 137 142 13 3 16 0 0 0 30 14 44 7 Dhar 196 347 0 2 2 1 1 2 63 37 100 8 Jhabua 182 9 0 1 1 1 0 1 45 0 45 Indore Region 1728 1374 20 12 32 4 3 7 233 93 326 9 Ujjain 314 465 3 0 3 2 0 2 28 1 29 10 Dewas 240 334 33 9 42 2 0 2 49 53 102 11 Shajapur 129 215 18 6 24 3 1 4 25 23 48 12 Agar 63 98 7 1 8 5 1 6 15 3 18 13 Ratlam 198 291 15 2 17 2 2 4 46 24 70 14 Mandsaur 226 325 21 6 27 8 3 11 61 43 104 15 Neemuch 138 196 28 14 42 10 0 10 46 46 92 Ujjain Region 1308 1924 125 38 163 32 7 39 270 193 463 West Discom 3036 3298 145 50 195 36 10 46 503 286 789 33KV Feeder wise Trippings Of MPWZ in June-2019 Total Outage Total No. -
The Nimadi-Speaking People of Madhya Pradesh a Sociolinguistic Profile
DigitalResources Electronic Survey Report 2012-002 ® The Nimadi-speaking people of Madhya Pradesh A sociolinguistic profile Kishore Kumar Vunnamatla Mathews John Nelson Samuvel The Nimadi-speaking people of Madhya Pradesh A sociolinguistic profile Kishore Kumar Vunnamatla Mathews John Nelson Samuvel SIL International ® 2012 SIL Electronic Survey Report 2012-002, January 2012 © 2012 Kishore Kumar Vunnamatla, Mathews John, Nelson Samuvel, and SIL International ® All rights reserved Contents ABSTRACT PREFACE 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 Geography 1.2 People 1.3 Language 1.4 Purpose and goals 2 DIALECT AREAS 2.1 Lexical similarity 2.1.1 Procedures 2.1.2 Site selection 2.1.3 Results and analysis 2.1.4 Conclusions 2.2 Dialect intelligibility 2.2.1 Procedures 2.2.2 Site Selection 2.2.3 Results And Analysis 2.2.4 Conclusions 3 BILINGUALISM 3.1 Sentence Repetition Testing 3.1.1 Procedures 3.1.2 Demographic details of the area 3.1.3 Results and Analysis 3.2 Questionnaires and observation 4 LANGUAGE USE, ATTITUDES, AND VITALITY 4.1 Procedures 4.2 Results 4.2.1 Language use 4.2.2 Language attitudes 4.2.3 Language vitality 5 SUMMARY OF FINDINGS 5.1 Dialect area study 5.2 Bilingualism study 5.3 Language use, attitudes, and vitality 6 RECOMMENDATIONS 6.1 For a Nimadi language development programme 6.2 For a Nimadi literacy programme APPENDICES Appendix A: Lexical Similarity Lexical Similarity Counting Procedures Wordlist Information and Informant Biodata International Phonetic Alphabet Wordlist Data Appendix B: Recorded Text Testing Introduction Snake Story Leopard -
Balwada Micro Irrigation Scheme Indicative Salient Features
SALIENT FEATURE (As proposed in DPR) Balwada Micro Irrigation Scheme Indicative Salient features 1. Name of the Project : Balwada Micro Irrigation Scheme 2. Type of Project : Irrigation Projectb (Irrigation or Multipurpose) 3. Location : Khargone District i) Supply Source : B.P.T-1 Of N.K.S.L ii) Lifting Point ; : Near village Gawalu Khargone District iii) Command In Khargone District 3.1 River Basin a) Name i) Flow : Narmada Basin ii) Command Village of Barwaha tehsil b) Located in : Madhya Pradesh 3.2 River / Tributaries : Narmada/choral 3.3 State(s) / District(s) or Tehsils in which following are located. State District Tehsil (a) (Supply Source) : M.P Khargone Barwaha (b) Lifting Point / Rising Main : (c) Command Area : District Teshil Khargone Barwaha 3.4 Name of Village near the Head-works (i) Starting Point : Gawalu of Barwaha tehsil Khargone District 3.5 Location of Head-Works : (i) Distribution Point : B.P.T-1 OF N.K.S.L PROJECT (ii) Delivery Point : Distribution chamber near Balwada . 3.6 Project area reference : as detailed below Canal & Project Area Distribution : Command Reference Chamber Area Topo sheet 46 N/15 46 B/3 No. Index Plan : Attached 3.7. Access to the Project. a) Nearest Airport : a) Devi Ahilya Airport Indore (M.P.) b) Nearest Rail Head : b) Balwada, i) 60 kms from Distribution point ii) 02kms. Distribution 4. Interstate aspects of the project Not applicable 5. Proposed annual utilization by the project : 31.846 MCM (i) G.C.A. : 7000 Hectare (ii) Irrigation C.C.A. : 5000 Hectare (iii) Annual irrigation on intensity of : 9650 Hectare irrigation @ 157% - Kharif : 72% (3600Ha.) - Rabi : 108% (5450 Ha.) - Perennial : 12% (5450 Ha.) Total - : 193 %(9650 Hact) 5.1 Discharge : 1.25 Cumec 6. -
Proposal for the Construction of an Approach Road & Slab Culvert For
NATIONAL HIGHWAYS AUTHORITY OF INDIA (Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, Govt. of India) aaa Grater / REGIONAL OFFICE an we $-2/167, * : qa at 3te0 wicirh, gators ted WHA Ura, UlaTeT (7. ) 462016 BHARATMALA E-2/167, Arera Colony, Near Habibganj Railway Station, Bhopal (M.P.) 462016 ROAD TO PROSPERITY @TUTI/Phone : 0755-2426638, the /Fax : 0755-2426698, 3-Het/E-mail : [email protected] NHAVRO-MP/IND/ROLINH-59/Hatod/2020/ Ly | 8 SO Date: 23.01.2021 To, Authorized Signatory, Ms Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. Indore Divisional Office, Plot No.8, Scheme No.159, (Kushabhau Thakre Marg), MR-10, Indore (M.P.)-452016 Sub: 4-laning of Indore-MP/Gujrat Border Section of NH-59 from km. 9.500 to 171.100 in the State of Madhya Pradesh on BOT basis under NHDP Phase-Ill - Proposal for the construction of an approach road & Slab Culvert for proposed retail outlet of Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. on New NH-47 (Old NH-59) at Ch, 294.550 (294.528-294.573), LHS, Khasra No. 1157/3/1, Patwari Halka No. 42/84, Village-Hatod, Tehsil-Sardarpur & Distt.-Dhar in the State of Madhya Pradesh - In-principle approval - Reg. Ref: 1. M/s IOCL letter no. NH:NOC/HATODILF/01 dated 21.08.2020. 2. This office letter no, NHAIRO-MP/IND/ROL/NH-59/Hatod/2020/39293 dated 12.06.2020. 3. PD, PlU-Indore letter no. NHAI/PIU/IND/Ind.Guj./RO/2020/622 dated 12.03.2020. 4. This office letter no. NHAI/RO-MP/IND/ROL/NH-59/Hatod/2020/37641 dated 09.01.2020. -
Kharif Fallow Utilization for Groundwater Recharge
Int.J.Curr.Microbiol.App.Sci (2019) 8(12): 284-290 International Journal of Current Microbiology and Applied Sciences ISSN: 2319-7706 Volume 8 Number 12 (2019) Journal homepage: http://www.ijcmas.com Original Research Article https://doi.org/10.20546/ijcmas.2019.812.039 Kharif Fallow utilization for Groundwater Recharge Shobhana Bisen1*, Preeti Choudhary2, M. K. Awasthi3 and Deepak Patle3 1Department of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, MPKV, Rahuri, Maharastra, India 2Department of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, GBPUAT, Pantnagar, Uttrakhand, India 3Department of Soil and Water Engineering, JNKVV, Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh, India *Corresponding author ABSTRACT Ground water withdrawal for irrigation, if not done correctly, leads to falling water table below critical level. In Madhya Pradesh, out of 313 blocks, 23 blocks extended to over exploited category, 09 blocks are in critical stage and 57 blocks are in semi critical stage (MP Dynamic Ground Water Assessment, 2015). As per rules of CGWB, the areas where the water level could not recuperated upto 3m depth after the monsoon K e yw or ds season, will essential artificial recharge. The solution lies in harvesting rainwater in farmers‟ field which are kept or left fallow for one reason or another. Though, all Groundwater these fields may not be good enough to recharge groundwater like percolation tanks recharge, Kharif but transfer water well below at least @4 mm/day even in clayey soils. So, to decide fallow, Priority which area is to be taken first in present study a method of identification of priority is Article Info proposed. Four basic criteria to decide the priority namely, amount of annual rainfall, the soil type, stage of ground water development stage and extent of kharif fallow. -
O.I.H. Government of India Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs Lok Sabha Unstarred Question No. 2803 to Be Answered on March
O.I.H. GOVERNMENT OF INDIA MINISTRY OF HOUSING & URBAN AFFAIRS LOK SABHA UNSTARRED QUESTION NO. 2803 TO BE ANSWERED ON MARCH 13, 2018 DEVELOPMENT OF CITIES No.2803 SHRI LAXMI NARAYAN YADAV: Will the Minister of HOUSING AND URBAN AFFAIRS be pleased to state: (a) the proposals for the development of cities forwarded by the State Government of Madhya Pradesh to the Union Government during the last three years; (b) the names of the cities and the nature of work to which the said schemes are related to; and (c) the action taken so far by the Union Government on the said proposals along with the final outcome thereof? ANSWER THE MINISTER OF STATE ((INDEPENDENT CHARGE) OF THE MINISTRY OF HOUSING & URBAN AFFAIRS (SHRI HARDEEP SINGH PURI) (a) to (c) Urban Development is a State subject. The Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs facilitates and assists States/Union Territories (UTs), including Madhya Pradesh, in this endeavour through its various Missions- Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM), Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation (AMRUT), Smart Cities Mission (SCM), Pradhan Mantri Awas Yogana(Urban)(PMAY-U) and through Metro Rail Projects to improve urban infrastructure to improve the quality of life in cities and towns covered under these Mission. List of such cities/towns in the State of Madhya Pradesh along with details of funds released are in Annexure. Under the Missions the Central Government approves the State Plans and provides the Central Assistance to the States. The projects are designed, approved and executed by the States/UTs and the Cities. Annexure Annexure referred to in reply to part (a) to (c) of Lok Sabha Unstarred Question No 2803 regarding ‘Development of Cities’ for answer on 13 March,2018 Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation(AMRUT) Cities covered under AMRUT Sl.No. -
CEO Madhya Pradesh
General Elections to Lok-Sabha -2019 (Madhya Pradesh) Parliamentary Assembly Returning Offricer ARO DEO Constituency Constituency District Name Division Name No. Name Name E-Mail Contact No. No. Name Officer Name E-Mail Contact No. Officer Name E-Mail Contact No. Shri. Devendra devendrasingh52 1Morena 1Sheopur 9806126292 SHEOPUR CHAMBAL Pratap singh [email protected] Shri Basant dmsheopur@m 9425064030 kurre p.nic.in erovjrsheopur@g 1 Morena 2 Vijaypur Shri Saurabh Mishra 8959575348 SHEOPUR CHAMBAL mail.com sdmsabalgarh@g 1 Morena 3 Sabalgarh Mr. Mrinal Meena 9111466449 MORENA CHAMBAL mail.com sdmjoura20@gm 1MorenaMs. Priyanka dmmorena 4 Joure Mr. Vinod Singh 9425338594 MORENA CHAMBAL 7898332844 ail.com Das @nic.in prakashkasbe59 1 Morena 5 Sumawali Mr. Prakash Kasbe 9425038737 MORENA CHAMBAL @gmail.com Ms. Priyanka dmmorena@ni 7898332844 suresh.jadav4@g Das c.in 1 Morena 6 Morena Mr. Suresh Jadhav 9893504461 MORENA CHAMBAL mail.com Shri. Suresh Kumar dimini07morena 1Morena 7Dimani 9926044085 MORENA CHAMBAL Barahdiya @gmail.com sdmambah123@ 1 Morena 8 Ambah (SC)Mr. Neeraj Sharma 9826248644 MORENA CHAMBAL gmail.com [email protected] 2 Bhind (SC) 9 Ater Shri Siddharth Patel 9754846815 BHIND CHAMBAL om ro.bhind1@gmail 2 Bhind (SC) 10 Bhind Shri H.B.Sharma 9425743666 BHIND CHAMBAL .com Shri Iqbal ro.lahar1@gmail. Dr vijay [email protected] 2Bhind (SC) 11Lahar 9893708227 BHIND 8435333095 CHAMBAL Mohammad com Kumar J. n ro.mehgaon@gm 2 Bhind (SC) 12 Mehgaon Shri M. K. Sharma 9424314844 BHIND CHAMBAL Shri Dr. vijay dmbhind@n ail.com 8435333095 Kumar J. ic.in ro.gohad@gmail. 2 Bhind (SC) 13 Gohad (SC)Shri D.K. -
Madhya Pradesh Administrative Divisions 2011
MADHYA PRADESH ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISIONS 2011 U T KILOMETRES 40 0 40 80 120 T N Porsa ! ! ! Ater Ambah Gormi Morena ! P Bhind P A ! BHIND MORENA ! Mehgaon! A ! Ron Gohad ! Kailaras Joura Mihona Sabalgarh ! ! P ! ! Gwalior H ! Dabra Seondha ! GWALIOR ! Lahar R Beerpur Vijaypur ! ! Chinour Indergarh Bhitarwar DATIA Bhander ! T SHEOPUR Datia ! Sheopur Pohri P P P ! ! Narwar R Karahal Shivpuri A ! Karera Badoda P SHIVPURI ! S ! N!iwari D D ! ! Pichhore Orchh!a Gaurihar ! D Nowgong E ! Prithvipur Laundi Kolaras ! Chandla Jawa ! D TIKAMGARHPalera ! ! ! ! Teonthar A ! ! Jatara ! ! Maharajpur Khaniyadhana ! Sirmour Bad!arwas Mohangarh P ! Ajaigarh ! Naigarhi S ! ! Majhgawan ! REWA ! ! ! Chhatarpur Rajnagar ! Semaria ! ! Khargapur Birsinghpur Mangawan Hanumana Singoli Bamori Isagarh Chanderi ! CHHATARPUR (Raghurajnagar) ! Guna ! P Baldeogarh P Kotar (Huzur) Maugan!j Shadhora Panna P ! Raipur-Karchuliyan ! Chitrangi ! ASHOKNAGAR Tikamgarh Bijawar ! Rampur P ! J Jawad P ! ! DevendranagarNago!d !Gurh Sihawal ! ! P Baghelan ! Churhat GUNA Bada Malhera ! ! P H NEEMUCH Bhanpura Ashoknagar ! !Gunnor (Gopadbanas) ! I Raghogarh N Ghuwara D ! SATNA I ! ! A P ! Manasa ! Mungaoli PANNA Unchahara !Amarpatan Rampur Naikin Neemuch ! ! ! Amanganj SINGRAULI ! Aron ! Shahgarh Buxwaha ! Pawai SIDHI ! Kumbhraj Bina ! ! Ram!nagar !Majhauli Deosar Jiran Malhargarh Garoth Hatta ! ! Kurwai ! Shahnagar Maihar P ! ! Maksoodanga!rh Malthon Batiyagarh ! MANDSAUR ! ! ! Beohari Singrauli Mandsaur Shamgarh Jirapur ! Chachaura Lateri Sironj Khurai Raipura ! ! ! A ! P ! ! ! ! -
ISSN: 2320-5407 Int. J. Adv. Res. 1(6), 3007-3011
ISSN: 2320-5407 Int. J. Adv. Res. 1(6), 3007-3011 Journal Homepage: -www.journalijar.com Article DOI:10.21474/IJAR01 DOI URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.21474/IJAR01 RESEARCH ARTICLE ICHTHYOFAUNAL DIVERSITY OF NARMADA RIVER OF OMKARESHWAR REGION IN KHANDWA DISTRICT, MADHYA PRADESH. Meenakshi Chouhan1, Anis Siddiqui1 and Shailendra Sharma2. 1. Department of Zoology, Govt. Holkar Science College, Indore, M.P. 2. Department of Biotechnology, Adarsh Institute of Management and Science, Dhamnod, M.P. …………………………………………………………………………………………………….... Manuscript Info Abstract ……………………. ……………………………………………………………… Manuscript History The river Narmada is the longest westerly flowing river of the country and total length of 1,312 kilometers flowing between the famous Received: 01 March 2013 Vindhyas and Satpura ranges. The present work has been conducted to Final Accepted: 22 May 2013 assess the ichthyofaunal diversity of a stretch of Narmada river during Published: June 2013 year 2010-2011 in the Omkareshwar region, situated between latitude Key words:- (DMS) 22°15’1” N and longitude (DMS) 76°8’48” E. The study was Ichthyofauna diversity, Narmada conducted in monsoon, post monsoon, winter and summer seasons. river. During the present survey of Narmada river 59 fish species were recorded, which belong to 7 orders, 17 families and 34 genera. Copy Right, IJAR, 2013,. All rights reserved. …………………………………………………………………………………………………….... Introduction:- Biodiversity is the variation in the genetics and life forms of populations, species, communities and ecosystem. Biodiversity is important for the future sustainability of freshwater natural resources. Biodiversity affects the capacity of living systems to respond to changes in the environment and is essential for providing goods and services from ecosystem (e.