User:Ashishmanipal/sandbox

"Adalhat", now a rising rural market place, was a small village located in Mirzapur district of Uttar Pradesh state in northern India. Its name is derived from famous Sufi saint Adalshah Baba, whose Majar is still maintained in vill. Ibrahimpur,which is a cent percent Hindu village. Adalhat is not a revenue village, so not on all administrative records,but it comprises villages Ibrahimpur,Naithi,Hansapur,Garaundi,and Pathraura of Tahsil Chunar.It has police station and post office in name of Adalhat. About 50 years ago this place was confined to vill. Ibrahimpur only. There was only one primary school for about a dozen nearby villages till 1951. A social worker and Sarpanch of this area Sri Sita Ram Gupta took initiative and a middle school was started in 1951 which gradually rose up to 10+2 standard now and named as "Adarsh Inter College".The college is co-ed with strength of about 3000,girls almost in equql no. of boys. The connectivity of this place by canal service roads and Sharma Road extended up to Bihar in east and being on main Varanasi-Shaktinagar road, opened doors to good business. There is a post graduate level Government run degree college for women "Lalta Singh Rajkiya Mahila Mahavidyalaya".The strength of girls in this college is about 1500. There are two nationalised and one cooperative bank branches in Adalhat market. This is not a big business center but its proximity to Varanasi (25 km.) and being hub of agricultural activities has a good potential for a Food Processing unit.

The place has also been in news for revamping eduaction system in rural India, many schools like [Royal Public school], Eden school, Kalidasa have transformed the education system in the area covering approximately 50 km.

This place is loacted on Varanasi-Shaktinagar highway, nearest railway station being Naryanpur.The place is famous for its near by water fall, Lakhnia dari.

Climate
Adalhat experiences a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cwa) with large variations between summer and winter temperatures. Summers are long, from early April to October, with intervening monsoon seasons and are also extremely hot, even by South Asian standards. The temperature ranges between 22°C – 46 °C (72°F – 115 °F) in the summers. Winters in Varanasi see very large diurnal variations, with warm days and downright cold nights. Cold waves from the Himalayan region cause temperatures to dip across the city in the winter from December to February and temperatures below 5 °C are not uncommon. The average annual rainfall is 1110 mm. Fog is common in the winters, while hot dry winds, called loo, blow in the summers.

Through a combination of water pollution, new constructions of upstream dams, and increase in the local temperature, the water level of the Ganges has recently gone down significantly, and small islands have become visible in the middle of the river.

17 May 2012 was the hottest day of the season so far with mercury soaring up to 45.6°C.