Showing posts with label General Knowledge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Knowledge. Show all posts

27 July, 2009

Sahitya Academy Award - Hindi

Year Book Author
2007 Inhin Hathiyaron Se (Novel) Amar Kant
2006 Sanshyatma (Poetry) Gyanendrapati
2005 Kyap (Novel) Manohar Shyam Joshi
2004 Dushchakra Mein Srista (Poetry) Viren Dangwal
2003 Kitne Pakistan (Novel) Kamleshwar
2002 Do Panktiyon Ke Beech (Poems) Rajesh Joshi
2001 Kali-Katha : Via Bypass (Novel) Alka Saraogi
2000 Hum Jo Dekhte Hain (Poetry) Manglesh Dabral
1999 Deewar Main Ek Khirkee Rahathi Thi (Novel) Vinod Kumar Shukla
1998 Naye Ilake Mein (Poetry) Arun Kamal
1997 Anubhav Ke Aakash Mein Chand (Poetry) Leeladhar Jagoori
1996 Mujhe Chand Chahiye (Novel) Surendra Verma
1995 Koi Doosra Nahin (Poetry) Kunwar Narain
1994 Kahin Nahin Wahin (Poetry) Ashok Vajpeyi
1993 Ardhanarishwar (Novel) Vishnu Prabhakar
1992 Dhai Ghar (Novel) Giriraj Kishore
1991 Main Vaqt Ke Hun Samne (Poetry) Girija Kumar Mathur
1990 Neela Chand (Novel) Shiv Prasad Singh
1989 Akaal Mein Saras (Poetry) Kedarnath Singh
1988 Aranya (Poems) Naresh Mehta
1987 Magadh (Poems) *Shrikant Verma
1986 Apurva (Poetry) Kedarnath Aggarwal
1985 Kavve Aur Kala Pani (Short stories) Nirmal Varma
1984 Log Bhool Gaye Hain (Poetry) Raghuvir Sahai
1983 Khutiyon Par Tange Log (Poetry) *Sarveshwar Dayal Saxena
1982 Viklang Shraddha Ka Daur (Satire) Harishankar Parsai
1981 Tap Ke Taye Hue Din (Novel) Trilochan
1980 Zindaginama-Zinda Rukh (Novel) Krishna Sobti
1979 Kal Sunana Mujhe (Poetry) *Dhoomil
1978 Utna Vah Suraj Hai (Poetry) *Bharat Bhushan Agarwal
1977 Chuka Bhi Hun Nahin Main (Poetry) Shamsher Bahadur Singh
1976 Meri Teri Uski Baat (Novel) Yashpal
1975 Tamas (Novel) Bhisham Sahni
1974 Mitti Ki Baraat (Poetry) Shiv Mangal Singh `Suman'
1973 Alok Parva (Essays) Hazari Prasad Dwivedi
1972 Buni Huyi Rassi (Poetry) Bhawani Prasad Mishra
1971 Kavita Ke Naye Pratiman (Literary criticism) Namwar Singh
1970 Nirala Ki Sahitya Sadhana (Biography) Ram Vilas Sharma
1969 Rag Darbari (Novel) Shrilal Shukla
1968 Do Chattanen (Poetry) Harivansh Rai Bachchan
1967 Amrit Aur Vish (Novel) Amritlal Nagar
1966 Muktibodh (Novelette) Jainendra Kumar
1965 Rasa Siddhanta (Treatise on poetics) Nagendra
1964 Aangan Ke Par Dvar (Poetry) `Agyeya' (S.H. Vatsyayan)
1963 Premchand: Kalam Ka Sipahi (Biography) Amrit Rai
1961 Bhoole Bisre Chitra (Novel) Bhagwaticharan Verma
1960 Kala aur Burha Chand (Poetry) Sumitranandan Pant
1959 Sanskriti Ke Char Adhyaya (A Survey of Indian culture) `Dinkar' (Ramdhari Sinha)
1958 Madhya Asia Ka Itihas (History) Rahul Sankrityayan
1957 Bauddha Dharma-Darshan (Philosophy) *Acharya Narendra Dev
1956 Padmavat Sanjivani Vyakhya (Commentary) Vasudevasaran Agrawala
1955 Him-Tarangini (Poetry) Makhanlal Chaturvedi

ICC Trophy Summary



Year Host nation Final venue Scores Result
1979 England Worcester  Sri Lanka 324 for 8 (60 overs)
 Canada 264 for 5 (60 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 60 runs
1982 England Leicester  Bermuda 231 for 8 (60 overs)
 Zimbabwe 232 for 5 (54.3 overs)
Zimbabwe won by five wickets
1986 England Lord's, London  Zimbabwe 243 for 9 (60 overs)
 Netherlands 218 all out (58.4 overs)
Zimbabwe won by 25 runs
1990 Netherlands The Hague  Netherlands 197 for 9 (60 overs)
 Zimbabwe 198 for 4 (54.2 overs)
Zimbabwe won by six wickets
1994 Kenya Nairobi  Kenya 281 for 6 (50 overs)
 United Arab Emirates 282 for 8 (49.1 overs)
UAE won by two wickets
1997 Malaysia Kuala Lumpur  Kenya 241 for 7 (50 overs)
 Bangladesh 166 for 8 (25 overs)
Bangladesh won by two wickets
(Duckworth-Lewis method)
2001 Canada Toronto  Namibia 195 for 9 (50 overs)
 Netherlands 196 for 8 (50 overs)
Netherlands won by two wickets
2005 Ireland Clontarf  Scotland 324 for 8 (50 overs)
Ireland 277 for 9 (50 overs)
Scotland won by 47 runs
2009 South Africa SuperSport Park, Centurion Canada 185 all out (48 overs)
Ireland 188 for 1 (42.3 overs)
Ireland won by 9 wickets

Women's cricket World Cup Bowling Record

Bowling :
Record First Second
Most Wickets  Lyn Fullston 39  Carole Hodges 37
Lowest Average (min. 1000 balls bowled)  Lyn Fullston 11.94  Clare Taylor 13.94
Economy rate (min. 1000 balls bowled)  Sharon Tredrea 1.87  Raelee Thompson 1.97
Best bowling figures  Jackie Lord vs  India (1982) 6/10  Glenys Page vs  Trinidad and Tobago (1973) 6/20

Women's Cricket World Cup records

 Batting

Record First Second
Most runs Debbie Hockley 1501  Janette Brittin 1299
Highest average (min. 10 inns.) Karen Rolton 74.92  Claire Taylor 64.23
Strike rate (min. 10 inns.) Jo Chamberlain 133.33  Karen Rolton 88.06*
Most Centuries Janette Brittin 4  Claire Taylor
 Karen Rolton
3
Most fifties Debbie Hockley 12  Karen Rolton 9
Highest score Belinda Clark vs  Denmark (1997) 229*  Charlotte Edwards vs  IRE (1997) 173*

Women's Cricket World Cup Tournaments

Year Host Nation Final Venue Final
Winner Result Runner-up
1973

England
Edgbaston, Birmingham  England
279 for 3 (60 overs)
Eng won by 92 runs  Australia
187 for 9 (60 overs)
1978

India
Hyderabad  Australia
100 for 2 (31.3 overs)
Aus won by 8 wickets  England
96 for 8 (50 overs)
1982

New Zealand
Christchurch  Australia
152 for 7 (59 overs)
Aus won by 3 wickets  England
151 for 5 (60 overs)
1988

Australia
Melbourne  Australia
129 for 2 (44.5 overs)
Aus won by 8 wickets  England
127 for 7 (60 overs)
1993

England
Lord's, London  England
195 for 5 (60 overs)
Eng won by 67 runs  New Zealand
128 all out (55.1 overs)
1997

India
Eden Gardens, Kolkata  Australia
165 for 5 (47.4 overs)
Aus won by 5 wickets  New Zealand
164 all out (49.3 overs)
2000

New Zealand
Lincoln  New Zealand
184 all out (48.4 overs)
NZ won by 4 runs  Australia
180 all out (49.1 overs)
2005

South Afica
Centurion  Australia
215 for 4 (50 overs)
Aus won by 98 runs  India
117 all out (46 overs)
2009

Australia
North Sydney Oval  England
167 for 6 (46.1 overs)
Eng won by 4 wickets  New Zealand
166 all out (47.2 overs)
2013

India

World Cup records

World Cup records
 
Batting
Most runs Flag of India Sachin Tendulkar 1796 (1992–2007)
Highest average (min. 20 inns.) Flag of the West Indies Cricket Board Viv Richards 63.31 (1975–1987)
Highest score  Gary Kirsten v UAE 188* (1996)
Highest partnership  Rahul Dravid & Sourav Ganguly
(2nd wicket) v Sri Lanka
318 (1999)
Most runs in a tournament  Sachin Tendulkar 673 (2003)
Bowling
Most wickets  Glenn McGrath 71 (1996–2007)
Lowest average (min. 1000 balls bowled)  Glenn McGrath 19.21 (1996–2007)
Best bowling figures  Glenn McGrath v Namibia 7/15 (2003)
Most wickets in a tournament  Glenn McGrath 26 (2007)
Fielding
Most dismissals (wicket-keeper)  Adam Gilchrist 39 (1999–2007)
Most catches (fielder)  Ricky Ponting 24 (1996–2007)
Team
Highest score  India v Bermuda 413/5 (2007)
Lowest score  Canada v Sri Lanka 36 (2003)
Highest win %  Australia 75% (Played 69, Won 51)
Most consecutive wins  Australia 23 (1999–2007)
Most consecutive tournament wins  Australia 3 (1999–2007)

Man of the Match in World Cup Final

Year Player Performance details
1975  Clive Lloyd 102 runs
1979  Viv Richards 138*
1983  Mohinder Amarnath 3/12 and 26
1987  David Boon 75 runs
1992  Wasim Akram 33 and 3/49
1996  Aravinda de Silva 107* and 3/42
1999  Shane Warne 4/33
2003  Ricky Ponting 140*
2007  Adam Gilchrist 149

Man of the Tournament Cricket World cup

Year Player Performance details
1992  Martin Crowe 456 runs
1996  Sanath Jayasuriya 221 runs and 7 wickets
1999  Lance Klusener 281 runs and 17 wickets
2003  Sachin Tendulkar 673 runs and 2 wickets
2007  Glenn McGrath 26 wickets

Cricket World Cup teams

Team Appearances Best result Statistics
Total First Latest Played Won Lost Tie NR
 Australia 9 1975 2007 Champions (1987, 1999, 2003, 2007) 69 51 17 1 0
 West Indies 9 1975 2007 Champions (1975, 1979) 57 35 21 0 1
 India 9 1975 2007 Champions (1983) 58 32 25 0 1
 Pakistan 9 1975 2007 Champions (1992) 56 30 24 0 2
 Sri Lanka 9 1975 2007 Champions (1996) 57 25 30 1 1
 England 9 1975 2007 Runners-up (1979, 1987, 1992) 59 36 22 0 1
 New Zealand 9 1975 2007 Semifinals (1975, 1979, 1992, 1999,2007) 62 35 26 0 1
 Zimbabwe 7 1983 2007 Super Six (1999, 2003) 45 8 33 1 3
 South Africa 5 1992 2007 Semifinals (1992, 1999, 2007) 40 26 12 2 0
 Kenya 4 1996 2007 Semifinals (2003) 23 6 16 0 1
 Bangladesh 3 1999 2007 Super 8 (2007) 20 5 14 0 1
 Ireland 1 2007 2007 Super 8 (2007) 9 2 6 1 0
 Canada 3 1979 2007 Round 1 12 1 11 0 0
 Netherlands 3 1996 2007 Round 1 14 2 12 0 0
 Scotland 2 1999 2007 Round 1 8 0 8 0 0
 Bermuda 1 2007 2007 Round 1 3 0 3 0 0
 Namibia 1 2003 2003 Round 1 6 0 6 0 0
 United Arab Emirates 1 1996 1996 Round 1 5 1 4 0 0
East Africa 1 1975 1975 Round 1 3 0 3 0 0

Cricket World Cup Statistical summaries

Year Host Nation(s) Final Venue Final
Winner Result Runner-up
1975

England
Lord's, London  West Indies
291 for 8 (60 overs)
WI won by 17 runs  Australia
274 all out (58.4 overs)
1979

England,
Lord's, London  West Indies
286 for 9 (60 overs)
WI won by 92 runs  England
194 all out (51 overs)
1983

England
Lord's, London  India
183 all out (54.4 overs)
Ind won by 43 runs  West Indies
140 all out (52 overs)
1987
 
India, Pakistan
Eden Gardens, Kolkata  Australia
253 for 5 (50 overs)
Aus won by 7 runs  England
246 for 8 (50 overs)
1992
 
Australia, New Zealand
MCG, Melbourne  Pakistan
249 for 6 (50 overs)
Pak won by 22 runs  England
227 all out (49.2 overs)
1996
 
Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka
Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore  Sri Lanka
245 for 3 (46.2 overs)
SL won by 7 wickets  Australia
241 for 7 (50 overs)
1999
  
England, Ireland, Netherlands, Scotland
Lord's, London  Australia
133 for 2 (20.1 overs)
Aus won by 8 wickets  Pakistan
132 all out (39 overs)
2003
 
Kenya, South Africa, Zimbabwe
Wanderers, Johannesburg  Australia
359 for 2 (50 overs)
Aus won by 125 runs  India
234 all out (39.2 overs)
2007

West Indies
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown  Australia
281 for 4 (38 overs)
Aus won by 53 runs on D/L Method Scorecard  Sri Lanka
215 for 8 (36 overs)
2011
 
India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh
Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai TBD TBD TBD

26 July, 2009

Fastest trains in India

Rank Train number Train name Origin Destination Round trip distance(km) Time(h) speed(km/h)

1 2001/2002 Bhopal Shatabdi Bhopal New Delhi 1402 15:40 89.52

2 2951/2952 Mumbai Rajdhani Mumbai Central New Delhi 2769 31:55 86.76

3 2301/2302 Howrah Rajdhani Howrah (Kolkata) New Delhi 2893 34:05 84.88

4 2909/2910 Bandra Terminus Garib Rath Bandra Terminus (Mumbai) Hazrat Nizamuddin (Delhi) 2732 33:10 82.37

5 2313/2314 Rajdhani Sealdah (Kolkata) New Delhi 2907 35:40 81.50

6 2003/2004 Lucknow Swarna Shatabdi Lucknow New Delhi 1022 12:40 80.68

7 2953/2954 August Kranti Rajdhani Mumbai Central Hazrat Nizamuddin (Delhi) 2755 34:30 79.86

8 2309/2310 Patna Rajdhani Rajendra Nagar (Patna) New Delhi 2004 25:25 78.85

9 2433/2434 Chennai Rajdhani Chennai Central Hazrat Nizamuddin (Delhi) 4354 56:15 77.40

10 2611/2612 Chennai Garib Rath Chennai Central Hazrat Nizamuddin (Delhi) 4354 56:20 77.29

International Rail Links

India has rail links with Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. It also plans to install a rail system in southern Bhutan. A move to link the railways of India and Sri Lanka never materialised. But a train ferry service connects the closest railheads between Indian and Sri Lanka.

Before the Partition of India there were eight rail links between what are now India and Pakistan. However, currently there are only two actively maintained rail links between the two countries.

The first one is at Wagah in Punjab. The Samjhauta Express plies this route from Amritsar in India to Lahore in Pakistan. The second one, opened in 2006 runs between Munabao (in Rajasthan in India) and Khokhrapar (in Sindh in Pakistan).

International Rail Links

India has rail links with Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. It also plans to install a rail system in southern Bhutan. A move to link the railways of India and Sri Lanka never materialised. But a train ferry service connects the closest railheads between Indian and Sri Lanka.

Before the Partition of India there were eight rail links between what are now India and Pakistan. However, currently there are only two actively maintained rail links between the two countries.

The first one is at Wagah in Punjab. The Samjhauta Express plies this route from Amritsar in India to Lahore in Pakistan. The second one, opened in 2006 runs between Munabao (in Rajasthan in India) and Khokhrapar (in Sindh in Pakistan).

Committee Constituted for Rail Security

Shahnawaz Committee : 1954

Kunjaru Committee : 1962

Wanchoo Committee : 1968

Seekari Committee: 1978

Khanna Committee: 1998

Rail transport in India

Rail transport is a commonly used mode of long-distance transportation in India. Almost all rail operations in India are handled by a state-owned organisation, Indian Railways, under the federal Ministry of Railways.

Railways were introduced to India in 1853, and by the time of India's independence in 1947 they had grown to forty-two rail systems. In 1951 the systems were nationalised as one unit—Indian Railways—to form one of the largest networks in the world.

A plan for a rail system in India was first put forward in 1832, but no further steps were taken for more than a decade. In 1844, the Governor-General of India Lord Hardinge allowed private entrepreneurs to set up a rail system in India. The East India Company (and later the British Government) encouraged new railway companies backed by private investors under a scheme that would provide land and guarantee an annual return of up to five percent during the initial years of operation

Some Facts About NHAI

1. NH-6 & NH-7 cross each other at Nagpur.

2. NH-7 is the longest National Highway from Varanasi to Kanyakumari.

3. Highest Road length is in Maharashtra.

4. The Mekong-Ganga Project aims to connect West Asia and South East Asia.

National Highway Authority of India(NHAI)

The National Highways Authority of India was constituted by an act of Parliament, the National Highways Authority of India Act, 1988. It is responsible for the development, maintenance and management of National Highways entrusted to it and for matters connected or incidental thereto. The Authority was operationalized in February, 1995 with the appointment of full time Chairman and other Members.

Facts About Roads in India

1.About 65% of freight and 80% passenger traffic is carried by the roads.

2. National Highways constitute only about 2% of the road network but carry about 40% of the total road traffic .

3. Number of vehicles has been growing at an average pace of 10.16% per annum over the last five years.

National Highways State wise

Sr.No. Name of the State Length (Kms)

1) Andhra Pradesh 4,537
2) Arunachal Pradesh 1992
3) Assam 2,836
4) Bihar 3,642
5) Chandigarh 24
6) Chhatisgarh 2,184
7) Delhi 72
8) Goa 269
9) Gujarat 3,245
10) Haryana 1,512
11) Himachal Pradesh 1,409
12) Jammu & Kashmir 1,245
13) Jharkhand 1,805
14) Karnataka 4,396
15) Kerala 1,457
16) Uttarakhand 2,042
17) Madhya Pradesh 4,670
18) Maharashtra 4,176
19) Manipur 959
20) Meghalaya 810
21) Mizoram 927
22) Nagaland 494
23) Orissa 3,704
24) Pondicherry 53
25) Punjab 1,557
26) Rajasthan 5,585
27) Sikkim 62
28) Tamil Nadu 4,832
29) Tripura 400
30) Uttar Pradesh 5,874
31) Uttaranchal 1,991
32) West Bengal 2,524
33) Andaman & Nicobar 300

National Highways in India

NH No. State Names with Length(km) Total Length(Km)


1 Delhi(21.4) Haryana(182.7) Haryana[116]/Punjab[175.1](582) Punjab(281.32) 1067.42
1 & 24 Delhi(8) 8
10 Delhi(20) Haryana(143.49) 163.49
11 Rajasthan(281) Uttar Pradesh[24.75]/Rajasthan[20.25](90) 371
12 Madhya Pradesh(297) Rajasthan(328) 625
13 Karnataka(194) Maharashtra(30) 224
13, 17 & 48 Karnataka(37) 37
14 Gujarat(118.1) Rajasthan(246) Rajasthan[42]/Gujarat[34](152) 516.1
15 Gujarat(106.2) Punjab(101) 207.2
15, 8A Gujarat(90.3) 90.3
17 Goa(139) Karnataka(89) Kerala(451) Maharashtra(84) 763
17B Goa(13) 13
18 Andhra Pradesh(188.752) 188.752
19 & 77 Bihar(60) 60
1A Jammu Kashmir(399.47) Punjab(65.77) Punjab[29]/Himanchal Pradesh[11](80) 545.24
2 Bihar(175) Bihar[10]/Jharkhand[70](160) Delhi/Haryana(8.8) Delhi[12]/Haryana[74]/Uttar Pradesh[113.8](599.4) Delhi[12]/Haryana[74]/Uttar Pradesh[59](435) Jharkhand(121.75) Uttar Pradesh(683.49) Uttar Pradesh[55]/Bihar[21](152) West Bengal(215.457) 2550.897
2, 25 Uttar Pradesh(62.8) 62.8
2,3 Uttar Pradesh(32.8) 32.8
200 Chattisgarh(28) Orissa(137) 165
203 Orissa(59) 59
205 Tamil Nadu[81.5]/Andhra Pradesh[44](251) 251
205 , 4 & 45 Tamil Nadu(4) 4
21 Punjab(72.9) 72.9
21, 22 Haryana[6]/Punjab[30](72) 72
210 Tamil Nadu(200) 200
215 Orissa(269) 269
22 Haryana[20]/Himanchal Pradesh[6.69]/Punjab[2](86.07) Himanchal Pradesh(103) 189.07
220 Tamil Nadu(57) 57
24 Uttar Pradesh(463.25) 463.25
25 Madhya Pradesh(35) Uttar Pradesh(200.72) Uttar Pradesh[11]/Madhya Pradesh[30](82) 317.72
25, 26 Uttar Pradesh(49.7) 49.7
25, 76 Madhya Pradesh(53) 53
26 Madhya Pradesh(275.7) Uttar Pradesh(87.3) 363
27 Uttar Pradesh(6) 6
28 Bihar(159.085) Uttar Pradesh(355.74) 514.825
28A Bihar(67) 67
3 Madhya Pradesh(218.8) Madhya Pradesh [1]/Rajasthan [9](20) Maharashtra(376) Rajasthan(10) Uttar Pradesh(16) Uttar Pradesh[7]/Rajasthan[10](34) 674.8
30 Bihar(53) 53
31 Assam(164.8) Bihar(298.15) West Bengal(97.85) 560.8
31, 31C West Bengal(201) 201
31C Assam(93) West Bengal(32) 125
33 Jharkhand(265) 265
34 Jharkhand(0) West Bengal(443.5) 443.5
35 West Bengal(60) 60
36 Assam(154.5) 154.5
37 Assam(142.5) 142.5
39 Manipur(111) Nagaland(28) 139
4 Karnataka(701.124) Maharashtra(387.75) Tamil Nadu(111.6) 1200.474
4, 45 Tamil Nadu(19) 19
41 West Bengal(53) 53
43 Chattisgarh(23) 23
44 Assam(116) Meghalaya(136) 252
45 Tamil Nadu(388.063) 388.063
45, 4 & 5 Tamil Nadu(32) 32
45B Tamil Nadu(252.997) 252.997
45Ext Tamil Nadu(73) 73
46 Tamil Nadu(145) 145
47 Kerala(380.6) Tamil Nadu(240.035) 620.635
47C Kerala(17.2) 17.2
48 Karnataka(154) 154
49 Tamil Nadu(186) 186
4A Goa(69) Karnataka(84) 153
4B, 4 Maharashtra(30) 30
5 Andhra Pradesh(1098.27) Orissa(390.398) Tamil Nadu(85.2) 1573.868
50 Maharashtra(30) 30
52 Assam(314) 314
52A Arunachal Pradesh(22) Assam(9) 31
54 Assam(308.5) Mizoram(140) 448.5
56A & B Uttar Pradesh(22.85) 22.85
57 Bihar(299) 299
57A Bihar(13) 13
58 Uttar Pradesh(125) 125
58, 72 Uttar Pradesh[21]/Uttaranchal[56](154) 154
59 Gujarat(210) Madhya Pradesh(168) 378
5A Orissa(77) 77
6 Chattisgarh(145.685) Gujarat(132.9) Maharashtra(305.455) Orissa(88) West Bengal(116.582) 788.622
60 Orissa(53.41) West Bengal(65.86) 119.27
65 Haryana(78) 78
66 Pondichery(4) Tamil Nadu(208.61) 212.61
67 Tamil Nadu(209.7) 209.7
67, KC1 Tamil Nadu(59.2) 59.2
67, KC2 Tamil Nadu(55.2) 55.2
67Ex Tamil Nadu(45) 45
68 Tamil Nadu(136.357) 136.357
69 Madhya Pradesh(13) 13
7 Andhra Pradesh(769.692) Karnataka(183.74) Madhya Pradesh(105.825) Maharashtra(270) Tamil Nadu(687.95) 2017.207
71 Haryana(142) 142
71A Haryana(73) 73
72 Uttaranchal(69) 69
73 Haryana(108) 108
75 Madhya Pradesh(100) Madhya Pradesh[68.5]/Uttar Pradesh[11.5](160) 260
75, 3 Madhya Pradesh(42) 42
76 Rajasthan(654.575) 654.575
76, 14 Rajasthan(43) 43
77 Bihar(89) 89
79 Rajasthan(171.87) 171.87
79, 76 Rajasthan(30) 30
79A Rajasthan(36.23) 36.23
7A Tamil Nadu(47.2) 47.2
8 Delhi[13]/Haryana[23](72) Delhi[9.7]/Haryana[18](55.4) Gujarat(583.5) Gujarat[118.2]/Maharashtra[120.77](478) Haryana[55]/Rajasthan[71](252) Haryana[64.3]/Rajasthan[161.3](451.2) Maharashtra(121.4) Rajasthan(418.48) 2431.98
80 Bihar(70) 70
83 Bihar(125) 125
84 Bihar(130) 130
85,19 Bihar(153) 153
86Ex Madhya Pradesh(40) 40
87 Uttaranchal(88) 88
8A Gujarat(200.56) 200.56
8B Gujarat(214) 214
8D Gujarat(127) 127
9 Andhra Pradesh(385.63) Maharashtra(110.05) 495.68
91 Uttar Pradesh(106) 106
95 Punjab(84) 84
NE1 Gujarat(50) 50
SH 54 Maharashtra(14.35) 14.35
SR Andhra Pradesh(12) Tamil Nadu(30.1) 42.1