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Experience of propagation and adaptation of third generation juvenile migrants from Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Paperback / softback Book

Experience of propagation and adaptation of third generation juvenile migrants from Andaman and Nicobar Islands Paperback / softback

Paperback / softback

Description

Andaman and Nicobar Islands lying in the Bay of Bengal is not just a replica of 

the mainland India. The Islands are a place having Independent cultural values, norms, 

and practices which is omnipresent in most aspects of islanders life (Zehmisch, 2017). 

The Islands stay detached from the outside world for a long period. A gathering of 572 

islands including islets and rocks, the two gatherings of islands are isolated by the 10 

degree channel. The Andaman gathering of Islands deceives the north of 10 degree 

channel while the Nicobar gathering of Islands toward the south. The capital of 

Andaman and Nicobar Islands is the Andaman's residential area of Port Blair. 

Andaman and Nicobar Islands are a sum of 572 islands including islets and rocks, 

scattered over in around 8,073  km2. The Islands were for the most part involved by 

the native individuals, particularly from the Negrito and Mongoloid clan. It was amid 

the year 1857 when Britishers set up a punitive settlement state at the Islands and 

individuals began thinking about the presence of such a gathering of Islands. The 

Islands were famously known as "Kala Pani-Black waters" situated in the Bay of 

Bengal was then a piece of Bengal Presidency.  

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