Jaragli

Jaragli is a village / panchayat[3][4] located in the Gir Gadhada Taluka of Gir Somnath district in Gujarat, India. Earlier, until August 2013, Jaragli was part of Una Taluka and Junagadh district.[5] The latitude 20.889738 and longitude 70.932895 are the geo-coordinate of the Village Jaragli. Gandhinagar is the state capital of Jaragli village which is located around 400 kilometres away from Jaragli.

Jaragli
Village
Jaragli
Location in Gujarat, India
Jaragli
Jaragli (India)
Coordinates: 20.889738°N 70.932895°E / 20.889738; 70.932895
Country India
StateGujarat
DistrictGir Somnath
TalukaGir Gadhada
Government
  TypePanchayati raj (India)
  BodyGram panchayat
Area
  Total1,017.55 ha (2,514.42 acres)
Population
 (2011)
  Total3,358[1]
 Sex ratio 1702/1656/[1]
Languages
  OfficialGujarati
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
362530[2]
Vehicle registrationGJ
Census code of Jaragli515270[1]
Nearest cityGir Gadhada, Una
Websitegirsomnathdp.gujarat.gov.in

According to Census 2011, with the 637 families, the population of this village is 3358. Out of this, 1702 are males and 1656 are females. Most residents are dependent on agriculture. [1][2]

Demographics

According to the 2011 census of India, Jaragli has 637 households. The effective literacy rate (i.e. the literacy rate of population excluding children aged 6 and below) is 73.74% [1]

Demographics (2011 Census)[1]
TotalMaleFemale
Population335817021656
Children aged below 6 years426224202
Scheduled caste241125116
Scheduled tribe---
Literates21621270892
Illiterates1196432764
Total Workers1301976325
Main workers1124954170
Main workers: Cultivators52048139
Main workers: Agricultural labourers352245107
Main workers: Household industry workers---
Main workers: Other25222824
Marginal workers (total)17722155
Marginal workers: Cultivators39534
Marginal workers: Agricultural labourers13413121
Marginal workers: Household industry workers---
Marginal workers: Others44-
Non-workers20577261331

List of villages in Gir Gadhada Taluka[3]

Below is the Revenue records list of forty-three villages of Gir Gadhada Taluka including Gir Gadhada village.[3]

gollark: Large binaries probably yes. Rust also does that. Nim doesn't somehow. I don't know why or particularly care.
gollark: But both seem to have pretty large dependency trees.
gollark: Might be a difference in dependency culture I guess.
gollark: Really? I find it to go much faster on average go programs versus average rust ones.
gollark: I mean, Go manages to sort of hit the first two and definitely the third.

References


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