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Tadoba Andhari Reserve is the largest national park in Maharashtra.The total area of the reserve is 625.4 square kilometres (241.5 sq mi). This includes Tadoba National Park, with an area of 116.55 square kilometres (45.00 sq mi) and Andhari Wildlife Sanctuary with an area of 508.85 square kilometres (196.47 sq mi).
Andhari river is a minor river of the Wainganga basin. It flows through the Chandrapur district of Maharashtra . Meandering through the Tadoba forests, it gives its name to Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve .
Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve Tiger at Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve. The Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve is located approximately 30 km north of Chandrapur near the Erai dam. This park was included in the project tiger since 1973. The total area of the reserve is 625.40 km 2. In 2014 the tiger population in Tadoba was 66, that number has gone up to 86.
Andhari river flowing through Tadoba Andhari Tiger Project in Maharashtra, India Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name.
Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 20 Nov 2016 at 21:54:44 (UTC). Original – Maya, a female tiger from the Tadoba Andhari Tiger Project
When Prabodh Kumar, a retired professor of anthropology and a grandson of Munshi Premchand found his new 29-year-old Bengali maid Baby Haldar's busy hands still as she dusted the books, he encouraged her to read. She first picked up Taslima Nasreen's Amar Meyebela (My Girlhood). Novels by Ashapurna Devi, Mahashweta Devi, Buddhadeb Guha followed.
Bhartendu Ji, the author of the play Andheri Nagari on the 1976 postage stamp of India. Andher Nagri is a six-act play written by Indian Hindi writer Bhartendu Harishchandra in 1881.
She moved to Champawat district in the state of Uttarakhand in North India, and continued to kill, bringing her total human kills up to 436. She was finally tracked down and killed in 1907. [ 14 ] She was known to enter villages, even during daylight, roaring and causing people to flee in panic to their huts.