Ancient Champaner World Heritage Site

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ancient Champaner World Heritage Site Tour Code : AKSR0514 Tour Type : Group Tour 1800 233 9008 ANCIENT CHAMPANER www.akshartours.com WORLD HERITAGE SITE 0 Nights / 1 Days PACKAGE OVERVIEW 1Country 1Cities 1Days Accomodation Meal NO ACCOMODATION LUNCH Highlights Visa & Taxes Accommodation on double sharing Breakfast and dinner at hotel 5% GST Transfer and sightseeing by pvt vehicle as per program Applicable hotel taxes SIGHTSEEINGS OVERVIEW Champaner Pavagadh Panchmahal Bohrani Vadodara SIGHTSEEINGS Champaner- Pavagadh Archaeological Park Champaner-Pavagadh Archaeological Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is located in Panchmahal district in Gujarat, India. It is located around the historical city of Champaner, a city which was founded by Vanraj Chavda, the most prominent king of the Chavda Dynasty, in the 8th century. YOUR ITINERARY Day Day 1: ANCIENT CHAMPANER WORLD HERITAGE SITE Morning after Breakfast Drive to Champaner-Pavagadh Archaeological Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is located in 1 Panchmahal district in Gujarat, India. It is located around the historical city of Champaner, a city which was founded by Vanraj Chavda, the most prominent king of the Chavda Dynasty, in the 8th century And the include Helical stepped well, Sakar Khan’s Dargah, City Gate near Kasbin Talao, Citadel walls, City walls at south-east corner of the citadel going up the hill, East and South Bhadra Gates, Sahar ki Masjid (Bohrani), Three cells inside the citadel wall between Sahar ki Masjid the local fund Dharmashala, Mandvi or Custom house, stepwell north of jama masjid, kevda masjid and cenotaph, khajuri masjid, nagina masjid, Lila gumbazki masjid, kabutarkhana pavilion, kamani masjid, bawaman mosque. Arrive Vadodara at the time of lunch Then After visit Laxmi Vilas Palace, Vadodara is one of the most majestic structures in India and was the private residence of Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III. Known to be the largest private dwelling of the size equivalent to four times of the Buckingham Palace, this magnificent palace is a must-visit when in Vadodara. Return back to the hotel for overnight stay. Lunch INCLUSION/EXCLUSION Inclusion Exclusion Lunch, AC Transportation, Professional Tour Guide Monument Ticket, Tips TRIP COST Type Price Double Sharing ( Per Person ) 3000 Triple Sharing ( Per Person ) 3000 * Note: 5% GST Additional On Total Tour Cost. T&C Apply at time of Booking. * Rates mentioned in the itinerary are based on Standard Rooms, supplement cost is applicable for Sea Facing / Lake Facing / Mountain Facing Rooms.
Recommended publications
  • UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Texts, Tombs and Memory: The Migration, Settlement and Formation of a Learned Muslim Community in Fifteenth-Century Gujarat Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/89q3t1s0 Author Balachandran, Jyoti Gulati Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Texts, Tombs and Memory: The Migration, Settlement, and Formation of a Learned Muslim Community in Fifteenth-Century Gujarat A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in History by Jyoti Gulati Balachandran 2012 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Texts, Tombs and Memory: The Migration, Settlement, and Formation of a Learned Muslim Community in Fifteenth-Century Gujarat by Jyoti Gulati Balachandran Doctor of Philosophy in History University of California, Los Angeles, 2012 Professor Sanjay Subrahmanyam, Chair This dissertation examines the processes through which a regional community of learned Muslim men – religious scholars, teachers, spiritual masters and others involved in the transmission of religious knowledge – emerged in the central plains of eastern Gujarat in the fifteenth century, a period marked by the formation and expansion of the Gujarat sultanate (c. 1407-1572). Many members of this community shared a history of migration into Gujarat from the southern Arabian Peninsula, north Africa, Iran, Central Asia and the neighboring territories of the Indian subcontinent. I analyze two key aspects related to the making of a community of ii learned Muslim men in the fifteenth century - the production of a variety of texts in Persian and Arabic by learned Muslims and the construction of tomb shrines sponsored by the sultans of Gujarat.
    [Show full text]
  • South Zone Drawing Section -- Date: 10-10-2018
    TO AHMEDABAD TO TO GODHARA NATIONAL HIGHWAY NO. 8 DUMAL TO AHMEDABAD TO GUJARAT FARTILIZER TO SAVLI NORTH DUMAD CHOWKDI CHHANI VEMALI SARDAR CHOK. NATIONALDENA HIGHWAY NO. 8 "A" TO GODHARA START POINT OF RUT-5 REFINERY TOWNSHIP RAMAKAKA GOLDAN CHOWKDI DEARI N A R M A D A C A N A L PRAMUKH SQ. RAJESHWAR HARMONY AMBIKA SOC. SUNDER VAN MOTNATH MAHADEV NAVRACHNA SOC. RAJESHWAR GOLD AKAS GANGA AKAS START POINT:-RUT-6 VEGETABLE & GRAIN MARKET N.T.S Trimurti KARODIYA AVANTISOC. HARANI 10 HANUMAN NARMADA KAILAS MAHADEV. TEMP. TALAV VASAHAT CHANAKYA SAMA UNDERA Abhilasha Sainik sport 24.0 M. JALARAM TEMPLE MOTIBHAI chhatralay complex E.M.E CIRCLE HIGH WAY BY PASS 100.0 M. METRO ROAD 24.0M. Transportnagar 24.0 M. 18.0 M. NAVARACHNA NANUBHAI TOWER SCHOOL 30.0 M. 12 MAHESANA Panchavati DARJIPURA ROAD 24.0 M. CIRCLE Mehsana nagar MANGAL PANDEY RD. D-CABIN SAYAJIPURA AIRPORT TOWN HALL TO AJWA Delux KANHA RESI 18.0 M. 7 MUKHI NGR.TRAN RASTA MANEKPARK AJWA O.H.TANK CROSS RD. Amitnagar Soc. KALPANA NEW V.I.P. ROAD CANTONMENT V.I.P. ROAD SOCIETY 40.0 M. GORWA 40.0 M. S.R.Petrol Pump LAXMI STUDIO NIZAMPURA HANUMAN START POINT:-RUT-1 Ghelani Petrol Pump TEMP. LAXMIPURA KHODIYARNAGAR 18.0 M. "T" "C" VUDA END POINT:-RUT-6 WARD NO:2 20.0M. BHAVAN 36.0 M. 20.0 M. 30.0 M. 14 HARANI ROAD WARD:7 OFFICE 9 Nagar Anand END POINT OF RUT-5 SANGAM END POINT:-RUT-1 C.K PRAJAPATI SCHOOL Fateganj Circle 36.0 CROSS RD.
    [Show full text]
  • Socio-Political Condition of Gujarat Daring the Fifteenth Century
    Socio-Political Condition of Gujarat Daring the Fifteenth Century Thesis submitted for the dc^ee fif DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HISTORY By AJAZ BANG Under the supervision of PROF. IQTIDAR ALAM KHAN Department of History Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarb- 1983 T388S 3 0 JAH 1392 ?'0A/ CHE':l!r,D-2002 CENTRE OF ADVANCED STUDY TELEPHONE SS46 DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY ALIGARH MUSLIM UNIVERSITY ALIGARH-202002 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN This is to certify that the thesis entitled 'Soci•-Political Condition Ml VB Wtmmimt of Gujarat / during the fifteenth Century' is an original research work carried out by Aijaz Bano under my Supervision, I permit its submission for the award of the Degree of the Doctor of Philosophy.. /-'/'-ji^'-^- (Proi . Jrqiaao;r: Al«fAXamn Khan) tc ?;- . '^^•^\ Contents Chapters Page No. I Introduction 1-13 II The Population of Gujarat Dxiring the Sixteenth Century 14 - 22 III Gujarat's External Trade 1407-1572 23 - 46 IV The Trading Cotnmxinities and their Role in the Sultanate of Gujarat 47 - 75 V The Zamindars in the Sultanate of Gujarat, 1407-1572 76 - 91 VI Composition of the Nobility Under the Sultans of Gujarat 92 - 111 VII Institutional Featvires of the Gujarati Nobility 112 - 134 VIII Conclusion 135 - 140 IX Appendix 141 - 225 X Bibliography 226 - 238 The abljreviations used in the foot notes are f ollov.'ing;- Ain Ain-i-Akbarl JiFiG Arabic History of Gujarat ARIE Annual Reports of Indian Epigraphy SIAPS Epiqraphia Indica •r'g-acic and Persian Supplement EIM Epigraphia Indo i^oslemica FS Futuh-^ffi^Salatin lESHR The Indian Economy and Social History Review JRAS Journal of Asiatic Society ot Bengal MA Mi'rat-i-Ahmadi MS Mirat~i-Sikandari hlRG Merchants and Rulers in Giijarat MF Microfilm.
    [Show full text]
  • Water Symbols and Architecture in Champaner-Pavagadh, Gujarat, India
    Water Symbols and Architecture in Champaner-Pavagadh, Gujarat, India Amita Sinha Professor of Landscape Architecture University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Summary The paper describes displacements of historic communities, abandonment of forts, and reclamation of sacred sites in the case study of the cultural landscape of Champaner-Pavagadh in Gujarat, India. The place dereliction resulted in a loss of traditional knowledge of water management, crucial to the survival of communities. Water symbols and architecture of its Hindu and Islamic building periods are interpreted to rediscover the lost ‘water-intelligence’. The paper argues that water is the unifying element in reading the bifurcated site—Hindu pilgrim site on Pavagadh Hill and Islamic Champaner city at its foot--and advocates conservation of historic waterworks so that they can be a frame for sensory experience of visitors. Case Study Champaner-Pavagadh, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Gujarat, is an interesting and unusual case study in how religion, culture, terrain, and climate interact in creating water systems that sustained large communities for 800 years between the 8th and 16th centuries. Champaner was the capital of Gujarat and as such its rich architectural legacy forms an important chapter in the architectural and urban history of India. As the last of settlements at the site, with the previous ones on Pavagadh Hill, its extant fortifications and water management systems are a marvel of engineering of the medieval era. The first Hindu settlement on the hill dates back to 8th c. and by 1484 CE it had been captured by the Muslim Sultan Mehmud Beghada who built his new city Champaner at its foot.
    [Show full text]
  • Navaratri of Gujarat Tour Package
    Tour Code : AKSR0345 Tour Type : FIT Package 1800 233 9008 NAVARATRI OF GUJARAT www.akshartours.com TOUR PACKAGE - 05 Days 4 Nights / 5 Days PACKAGE OVERVIEW 1Country 4Cities 5Days 1Activities Accomodation Meal 02 NIGHTS HOTEL ACCOMODATION AT 04 BREAKFAST AHMEDABAD 04 DINNER 02 NIGHTS HOTEL ACCOMODATION AT VADODARA Visa & Taxes Highlights 5% GST EXTRA Accommodation on double sharing Breakfast and dinner at hotel Transfer and sightseeing by pvt vehicle as per program Applicable hotel taxes SIGHTSEEINGS OVERVIEW - Ahmedabad, Vadnagar Baroda, - Sightseeing – Gandhi Ashram, Adalaj Step well, Modhera Sun Temple, Champaner, - Sardar Sarovar Dam, Amul Dairy, Garba SIGHTSEEINGS AHMADABAD Gandhi Ashram A Must-Visit On Any Trip To Ahmedabad Is The Gandhi Ashram On The Banks Of The Sabarmati River. Home To Gandhi From 1917 And 1930, It Was One Of The Key Places From Where The Struggle For Indian Independence Took Shape. It Was From Here In March 12, 1930, That Gandhi Launched The Dandi March To Protest Against The British Salt Law In India. The Cottage Where Gandhi Lived, Hriday Kunj, Tops The List Of Attractions Within The Complex. The Charles Correa-Designed Museum Contains Three Galleries–The Gandhi In Ahmedabad Gallery, The Painting Gallery And The My Life Is My Message Gallery–And Houses The Ashram’s Library. The Museum Is Open Daily From 8.30am To 6.30pm. There’s No Admission Fee. MODHERA Sun temple Modhera is a town in Mehsana district of Gujarat, India. The town is well known for the Sun Temple of Chaulukya era. The town is located on the bank of river Pushpavati.
    [Show full text]
  • Name Address Amount of Unpaid Dividend (Rs.) Mukesh Shukla Lic Cbo‐3 Ka Samne, Dr
    ALEMBIC PHARMACEUTICALS LIMITED STATEMENT OF UNCLAIMED/UNPAID DIVIDEND FOR THE YEAR 2018‐19 AS ON 28TH AUGUST, 2019 (I.E. DATE OF TRANSFER TO UNPAID DIVIDEND ACCOUNT) NAME ADDRESS AMOUNT OF UNPAID DIVIDEND (RS.) MUKESH SHUKLA LIC CBO‐3 KA SAMNE, DR. MAJAM GALI, BHAGAT 110.00 COLONEY, JABALPUR, 0 HAMEED A P . ALUMPARAMBIL HOUSE, P O KURANHIYOOR, VIA 495.00 CHAVAKKAD, TRICHUR, 0 KACHWALA ABBASALI HAJIMULLA PLOT NO. 8 CHAROTAR CO OP SOC, GROUP B, OLD PADRA 990.00 MOHMMADALI RD, VADODARA, 0 NALINI NATARAJAN FLAT NO‐1 ANANT APTS, 124/4B NEAR FILM INSTITUTE, 550.00 ERANDAWANE PUNE 410004, , 0 RAJESH BHAGWATI JHAVERI 30 B AMITA 2ND FLOOR, JAYBHARAT SOCIETY 3RD ROAD, 412.50 KHAR WEST MUMBAI 400521, , 0 SEVANTILAL CHUNILAL VORA 14 NIHARIKA PARK, KHANPUR ROAD, AHMEDABAD‐ 275.00 381001, , 0 PULAK KUMAR BHOWMICK 95 HARISHABHA ROAD, P O NONACHANDANPUKUR, 495.00 BARRACKPUR 743102, , 0 REVABEN HARILAL PATEL AT & POST MANDALA, TALUKA DABHOI, DIST BARODA‐ 825.00 391230, , 0 ANURADHA SEN C K SEN ROAD, AGARPARA, 24 PGS (N) 743177, , 0 495.00 SHANTABEN SHANABHAI PATEL GORWAGA POST CHAKLASHI, TA NADIAD 386315, TA 825.00 NADIAD PIN‐386315, , 0 SHANTILAL MAGANBHAI PATEL AT & PO MANDALA, TA DABHOI, DIST BARODA‐391230, , 0 825.00 B HANUMANTH RAO 4‐2‐510/11 BADI CHOWDI, HYDERABAD, A P‐500195, , 0 825.00 PATEL MANIBEN RAMANBHAI AT AND POST TANDALJA, TAL.SANKHEDA VIA BODELI, 825.00 DIST VADODARA, GUJARAT., 0 SIVAM GHOSH 5/4 BARASAT HOUSING ESTATE, PHASE‐II P O NOAPARA, 495.00 24‐PAGS(N) 743707, , 0 SWAPAN CHAKRABORTY M/S MODERN SALES AGENCY, 65A CENTRAL RD P O 495.00
    [Show full text]
  • A Sanskrit Vision of Mughal Conquests Audrey Truschke*
    South Asian History and Culture Vol. 3, No. 3, July 2012, 373–396 Setting the record wrong: a Sanskrit vision of Mughal conquests Audrey Truschke* Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA In 1589, Padmasagara¯ wrote the first Sanskrit account of the Mughal rise to power within a short poem titled Jagadgurukavya¯ (Poem on the Teacher of the World). The work primarily eulogizes the life of a Jain religious leader named H¯ıravijaya, but Padmasagara¯ devotes one-third of the text to detailing the military exploits of Humayun and Akbar. Moreover, Padmasagara¯ departs significantly from known Indo-Persian his- toriography and imagines a startlingly innovative storyline for the early days of the Mughal Empire. Through this substantial rewriting, he furthermore consistently depicts the coerced establishment of Mughal rule as engendering the flourishing of Indian cultural and religious traditions. In this article, I provide the first detailed account of Padmasagara’s¯ presentation of the battles of Humayun and Akbar to secure their claims over the subcontinent. I then seek to understand the motivations that fuelled this par- ticular narrative by placing Jagadgurukavya¯ in the context of Gujarati relations with the Mughal court, Jain religious interests and historical sensibilities in early modern India. In his account of the early Mughal Empire, Padmasagara¯ crafts a political vision in which history is not constituted by a set of unchangeable facts but rather by a range of potential cultural implications that can be best realized through literature. His ambi- tious narrative about the recent past has important implications for how we understand early modern Sanskrit historiography and its relationship to Mughal power.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of the 1557 Book of Mirrors by Seydi Ali Reis Julian N
    Student Publications Student Scholarship Spring 2012 The Long Road: An Analysis of the 1557 Book of Mirrors by Seydi Ali Reis Julian N. Weiss Gettysburg College Follow this and additional works at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship Part of the Islamic World and Near East History Commons Share feedback about the accessibility of this item. Weiss, Julian N., "The Long Road: An Analysis of the 1557 Book of Mirrors by Seydi Ali Reis" (2012). Student Publications. 193. https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/193 This is the author's version of the work. This publication appears in Gettysburg College's institutional repository by permission of the copyright owner for personal use, not for redistribution. Cupola permanent link: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/ 193 This open access student research paper is brought to you by The uC pola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of The uC pola. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Long Road: An Analysis of the 1557 Book of Mirrors by Seydi Ali Reis Abstract In 1552, Piri Reis was relieved from the Admiralty of the Ottoman Imperial Navy. Seydi Ali Reis was appointed to replace him and his assignment was to return fifteen galleys from Basra to Egypt. This should have been a relatively short journey. Seydi failed miserably, however. He lost most of the ships in battle with the Portuguese and bad weather, which he documents in his travelogue The irM ror of Countries. With nowhere left ot turn, he sold the remaining ships in Surat on the west coast of India.
    [Show full text]
  • Text, Power, and Kingship in Medieval Gujarat, C. 1398-1511
    TEXT, POWER, AND KINGSHIP IN MEDIEVAL GUJARAT, C. 1398-1511 APARNA KAPADIA DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY SCHOOOL OF ORIENTAL AND AFRICAN STUDIES, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON SUBMITTED FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF LONDON, 2010 1 ProQuest Number: 10672899 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 10672899 Published by ProQuest LLC(2017). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 Abstract of Thesis Text, Power, and Kingship in Medieval Gujarat, c. 1398 -1511 Despite the growing interest in the region of Gujarat, its pre-colonial history remains a neglected area of research. The dissertation is an attempt at redressing this gap, as well as at developing an understanding of the role of literary culture in the making of local polities in pre-modern South Asia. The dissertation explores the relationship between literary texts and political power. It specifically focuses on the fifteenth century, which coincides with the rise of the regional sultanate, which, along with the sultanates of Malwa, Deccan, and the kingdoms of Mewad and Marwar, emerged as an important power in the politics of South Asia in this period.
    [Show full text]
  • Tour Schedule
    Since 1924 The House of Mangaldas Girdhardas An Urban Heritage Hotel AHMEDABAD, INDIA NORTHERN NEIGHBORHOOD HERITAGE TOUR SCHEDULE Place/Site (From) Place/Site (To) Distance Ahmedabad (The House Of MG) Champaner 146 KM Champaner Pavagadh 6 KM Pavagadh Baroda 55 KM Baroda Ahmedabad (The House Of MG) 115 KM CHAMPANER – PAVAGADH Things to do – Step well, Pavagadh Hill, Hindu and Jain Temples, Jumma Masjid A UNESCO World Heritage Site Champaner founded in the 8th century by King Vanraj Chavda was an out-of-the-way pilgrimage site for hundreds of years, became the capital of Gujarat, and was then abandoned to be overtaken by the jungle. The city is remarkably well-preserved, with Hindu and Jain temples a thousand years old, mosques from the time of the Gujarat Sultanate, and the whole workings of a well-planned capital city still in evidence, from granaries and fortications to step wells and cemeteries. Pavagadh and the city of Champaner were captured by the Chauhan Rajputs around 1300 AD, and they ruled the area for almost the next two hundred years. Hindu pilgrims also still continue to climb Pavagadh hill to pray at the temple Mahakali. The principal township at the base of the hill included the Hissar-i- Khas (the royal palace) as well as the Jami Masjid. LAXMI VILLAS PALACE Things to do – Palace, Stepwell Palace built in 1890 as the residence of Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III, is indeed one of the grandest structures in India. Constructed in Indo-Saracenic style, it is an outstanding amalgam of elements from Hindu, Mughal and Gothic architectural structure with domes, minarets and arches.
    [Show full text]
  • Gujarat Under the Great Mughal
    Gujarat Under the Great Mughal Bijan Mondal Assistant Professor Department of History Jogamaya Devi College The Gujarat Sultanate 1. The founder of the ruling Muzaffarid dynasty, Zafar Khan (later Muzaffar Shah I) was appointed as governor of Gujarat by Nasir-ud-Din Muhammad bin Tughluq IV in 1391 2. Zafar Khan's father Sadharan, was a Tanka Rajput convert to Islam. Zafar Khan defeated Farhat-ul-Mulk near Anhilwada Patan and made the city his capital. 3. Following Timur’s invasion of Delhi, the Delhi Sultanate weakened considerably so he declared himself independent in 1407 and formally established Gujarat Sultanate. 4. The next sultan, his grandson Ahmad Shah I founded the new capital Ahmedabad in 1411. 5. His successor Muhammad Shah II subdued most of the Rajput chieftains. The prosperity of the sultanate reached its zenith during the rule of Mahmud Begada. He subdued most of the Rajput chieftains and built navy off the coast of Diu. 6. In 1509, the Portuguese wrested Diu from Gujarat sultanate following the battle of Diu. The decline of the Sultanate started with the assassination of Sikandar Shah in 1526. 7. Mughal emperor Humayun attacked Gujarat in 1535 and briefly occupied it. Thereafter Bahadur Shah was killed by the Portuguese while making a deal in 1537. 8. The end of the sultanate came in 1573, when Akbar annexed Gujarat in his empire. The last ruler Muzaffar Shah III was taken prisoner to Agra. 9. In 1583, he escaped from the prison and with the help of the nobles succeeded to regain the throne for a short period before being defeated by Akbar's general Abdul Rahim Khan -I – Khana.
    [Show full text]
  • Mining Plan with Progressive Mine Closure
    MINING PLAN WITH PROGRESSIVE MINE CLOSURE PLAN SUBMITTED UNDER RULE OF G.M.M.C.R.2017. For GAMDI ORDINARY SAND AREA (SURVEY NO.- 193 ORSANG RIVER BED ) NEAR VILLAGE - GAMDI, TALUKA – DABHOI DISTT. – VADODARA, STATE- GUJARAT MINE AREA - 6.0 HECT. (NON FOREST) (PLAN PERIOD: 3 YEAR) LESSEE DILIPBHAI GORDHANBHAI SONANI GAMDI, DABHOI, VADODARA PREPARED BY DR. HARPAL SINGH YADAV 233, MANGALAM STREET, NEAR YASHVI FLATES, MAHAVEER NAGAR, HIMMATNAGAR-383001, GUJARAT MOBILE - 91-9426575620 RQP NO. RQP/UDP/224/2001-A EMAIL :- [email protected] CONTENTS No. Chapter Page no. Introduction 1 1 General Mine Description 2 2 Location & Accessibility 3 3 Details of Approved Mining Plan/Scheme of Mining (If any) 4 1 Geology and Exploration 5-8 2 Mining 9-12 3 Mine Drainage 13 4 Stacking of Mineral Reject/Sub Grade Material and Disposal of 14 Waste 5 Use of Mineral and Mineral Reject 15 6 Processing of ROM and Mineral Reject 16 7 Other 17 8 Protection of Environment 18-19 9 Measures Taken/ To Be Taken For The Control Of Water, Noise 20 And Air Pollution: 10 Social Development 21 11 Details Of Health Check-Up And Insurance Of All The Employed 22 Persons Certificates / Undertakings / Consents 23-24 List of the Plans and Sections submitted 25 List of Documents annexed 25 Gamdi Ordinary Sand Mine-6.0 hect., Dilipbhai Gordhanbhai Sonani P a g e | 1 INTRODUCTION The Gamdi Ordinary Sand Area over an area of 6.0 hectare is located survey no. Orsang River bed near Village- Gamdi, Tehsil- Dabhoi, District- Vadodara, Gujarat.
    [Show full text]