Servarayan Hills

Coordinates: 11°50′0″N 78°16′0″E / 11.83333°N 78.26667°E / 11.83333; 78.26667
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Servarayan Hills
Servarayan Hills
Highest point
Elevation1,620 m (5,310 ft)
Coordinates11°50′0″N 78°16′0″E / 11.83333°N 78.26667°E / 11.83333; 78.26667
Naming
Native nameServarayan Hills (Tamil)
Geography
Servarayan Hills is located in Tamil Nadu
Servarayan Hills
Servarayan Hills
Parent rangeEastern Ghats

The Servarayan hills, with the anglicised name Shevaroy Hills, are a towering mountain range (1620 m) near the city of Salem, in Tamil Nadu state, southern India.

The local Tamil name comes from a local deity, Servarayan.

Geography[edit]

The Servarayans form part of the southern ranges of the Eastern Ghats System. Shevaroys cover an area of 400 square kilometres (99,000 acres),[1] with plateaus from 4,000–5,000 feet (1,200–1,500 m) above sea-level. The main town here is Yercaud.[1] As earlier stated, it also represents the highest peak in southern part of the Eastern Ghats, with the Solaikaradu peak towering to 1620 m above mean sea-level. It is nestled parallel to the lower Chitteri hills - Kalrayan hills, just north of the Kolli Hills and Pachaimalai Hills. Westwards, lie the Mettur hills. This range forms an important link in the southern part of Eastern Ghats hill chain.[citation needed]

A 1860 photo of Malaiyalis or, hill-dwellers of the Shevaroy Hills

Features[edit]

The Servarayan hills have several old coffee plantations, and a sanatorium. The major areas of tourist interest are the Yercaud Orchidarium of the Botanical Survey of India, and the old coffee estates.[citation needed]

Flora and fauna[edit]

Some patches of the original forests still exist in the Shevaroy hills and those in higher slopes and peaks contain several endemic species of plants and fauna. The faunal and floral elements high up here have stark similarities to the Western Ghats. Such highlights include Strobilanthes kunthiana (Neelakurinji) in the peaks here, which apart from upper reaches of Western Ghats, is not known from the Eastern Ghats elsewhere. Natural forests apart, coffee and citrus fruits, most notably oranges, are grown in abundance, as well as bananas, pears and jackfruit.[citation needed]

Fauna such as gaur, sambar deer, spotted deer, Indian pangolin, jackals, hares, foxes, mongoose, civets, giant squirrels, and many reptiles including endemic ones such Hemiphyllodactylus aurantiacus, Calotes calotes, Monilesaurus rouxii, Mabuya beddomii and shield tail snake like Uropeltis ellioti and Uropeltis shorttii (which is endemic to the hill range), the endangered Python molurus, Rhabdophis plumbicolor, Calliophis beddomei and Trimeresurus gramineus; endemic amphibians such as Hylarana, Raorchestes, Fejervarya and scores of birds like the whistling thrush, racket-tailed drongo, peacock, shama, Oriental leafbird and Indian grey hornbill occur in Shevaroy Hills.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Shevaroy Hills" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 855.