strait between India and Sri Lanka
The Palk Strait is a body of water that separates India and Sri Lanka, connecting the Bay of Bengal to the Indian Ocean. It serves as an important maritime passage between the two countries and marks a significant geographical boundary in South Asia.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Palk Strait is a strait between the Pamban Island in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu and the Mannar Island in the Northern Province of Sri Lanka. It links the Bay of Bengal to the Laccadive Sea. It is bound by a chain of low lying islands and shoals that are collectively called Ram Setu (Adam's Bridge) on one side and the Gulf of Mannar on the other side. The Palk Bay forms the south-western part of the strait. It stretches for about 137 km (85 mi) and is 64 to 137 km (40 to 85 mi) wide. It is named after Robert Palk, who was a governor of Madras (1755–1763) during the British Raj.
Several rivers including the Vaigai flow into the strait. The shallow waters in the strait and the presence of many small islands and reefs make it difficult for large ships to pass through, although fishing boats and small craft navigate the waters. Dredging the sea to make it deeper for navigation and plans for a bridge over the waters have been proposed.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).