Gonawan Village Polpulation
Gonawan is a Village located in the Taluka of Harnaut, in the district of Nalanda district, in the state of Bihar state with a total population of 5628. There are 846 houses in the Village.
Village name: Gonawan
Taluka name: Harnaut
District: Nalanda
State: Bihar
Total population: 5628
House Holds: 846
Gonawan Population by Sex
There are total of 2969 male persons and 2659 females and a total number of 963 children below 6 years in Gonawan.
The percentage of male population is 52.75%.
The percentage of female population is 47.25%.
The percentage of child population is 17.11%.
Males: 2969.
Females: 2659.
Children: 963.
Google Map of Gonawan
Simple Googler map location of Gonawan Village
View Larger Map of Gonawan, Harnaut, Nalanda
View satellite images/ street maps of villages in Gonawan, Harnaut, Nalanda India. The Map data on this website is provided by Google Maps, a free online map service one can access and view in a web browser.
Gonawan similar Villages list
- Gonavali, Guhagar
- Gonavaram, Panyam
- Gonawadi, Tamia
- Gonawadi, Bichhua
- Gonawadi Fakeer, Mohkhed
- Gonawan, Colonelganj
- Gonawan, Bihar
- Gonawan, Naubatpur
- Gonbinna, Srijangram
- Gonbora, Chhura
- Gonch, Firozabad
- Gonchaura, Shohratgarh
- Gonchhi, Kesaria
- Gonchhua, Jama
- Gonchi, Chhatarpur
- Gonchi, Bina
External Links
Gondwana
Gondwana ( ), (or Gondwanaland), was a supercontinent that existed from the Neoproterozoic (about 550 million years ago) until the Jurassic (about 180 million years ago).Gondwana Rainforests
The Gondwana Rainforests of Australia, formerly known as the Central Eastern Rainforest Reserves, are the most extensive area of subtropical rainforest in the world.Gondwanaland (Australian band)
Gondwanaland, originally billed as Gondwanaland Project, were an Australian ambient musical ensemble which combined the indigenous Australian instrument the didgeridoo with western instruments such as synthesiser and guitar.Gondwanatheria
Gondwanatheria is an extinct group of cynodonts that lived in the Southern Hemisphere, including Antarctica, during the Upper Cretaceous through the Miocene (and possibly much earlier, if Allostaffia is a member of this group), making them by far the late