Kasba (Purnia)

Kasba is a satellite town of Purnia city and part of Purnia Urban Agglomeration in Purnia district in the Indian state of Bihar.

Kasba
Satellite Town
Kasba
Location in Bihar, India
Kasba
Location in India
Coordinates: 25.8500°N 87.5500°E / 25.8500; 87.5500
Country India
StateBihar
DistrictPurnia
Urban AgglomerationPurnia Urban Agglomeration
Government
  TypeNagar Panchayat
  BodyKasba Nagar Panchayat
Population
 (2011)
  Total25,522
Languages
  OfficialMaithili, Hindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
854330
ISO 3166 codeIN-BR
Vehicle registrationBR-11
Lok Sabha constituencyPurnia
Vidhan Sabha constituencyKasba

Demographics

As of 2001 India census,[1] Kasba had a population of 25,522. Males constitute 53% of the population and females 47%. Kasba has an average literacy rate of 49%, lower than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 57%, and female literacy is 41%. In Kasba, 18% of the population is under 6 years of age.

Geographical location

Situated in the North Eastern part of Bihar, Kasba lies between 87.5' Eastern Longitude and 25.8 Degree North Latitude. Covers 0.5% (30 km2) of the state's area. Kasba can be broadly divided into two physiographic units, the Plains and the Plateau. A land endowed with minerals, fertile green fields, peace fallboard force, vast market and a political system committed to industrial growth.

Transportation

Road

NH 27 passes through Kasba. This National Highway connects Kasba to Purnia, Siliguri, Guwahati, Kolkata, Muzaffarpur, Patna, Gorakhpur, Lucknow and Porbandar.

Another, State Highway starts from Kasba that direct connects it to Line Bazar(Medical hub of this region), Purnia Court railway station and Kosi Division.

Railways

Kasba railway station lies on Barauni-Katihar, Saharsa and Purnia sections. This station has direct trains for Jogbani, Purnia and Katihar. Many Express trains pass through Kasba but doesn't stops, only DEMU stops here. For long distance trains, people have to go Purnia and Katihar for taking their train.

gollark: There're concurrent hashmaps and stuff presumably implemented with `unsafe`.
gollark: (thread-safe reference-counting pointer to a mutex to a T)
gollark: i.e. if I tried to just pass a mutable reference to a map to all of the stuff I run in different threads, it'd be a compiler error, so instead it's a `Arc<Mutex<T>>`.
gollark: Well, you can spawn threads, and the type system prevents weirdness with concurrency.
gollark: Oh, and Rust has that nice thing where you can't keep around both a mutable reference and immutable references to stuff.

References

  1. "Census of India 2001: Data from the 2001 Census, including cities, villages and towns (Provisional)". Census Commission of India. Archived from the original on 16 June 2004. Retrieved 1 November 2008.
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