Kairu Village Polpulation
Kairu is a Village located in the Taluka of Nawalgarh, in the district of Jhunjhunun district, in the state of Rajasthan state with a total population of 2347. There are 421 houses in the Village.
Village name: Kairu
Taluka name: Nawalgarh
District: Jhunjhunun
State: Rajasthan
Total population: 2347
House Holds: 421
Kairu Population by Sex
There are total of 1180 male persons and 1167 females and a total number of 299 children below 6 years in Kairu.
The percentage of male population is 50.28%.
The percentage of female population is 49.72%.
The percentage of child population is 12.74%.
Males: 1180.
Females: 1167.
Children: 299.
Google Map of Kairu
Simple Googler map location of Kairu Village
View Larger Map of Kairu, Nawalgarh, Jhunjhunun
View satellite images/ street maps of villages in Kairu, Nawalgarh, Jhunjhunun 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.
Kairu similar Villages list
- Kairokhatisar, Jarmundi
- Kairon (255), Patti
- Kairon Nangal (232), Amritsar -I
- Kaironwal (62), Tarn Taran
- Kairot, Majhgawan
- Kairouta, Salempur
- Kairu (72), Tosham
- Kairua, Giriak
- Kairuwa, Faridpur
- Kairuwa, Narwar
- Kairva, Manawar
- Kairwa, Robertsganj
- Kairwa, Kotkasim
- Kairwali, Neem-Ka-Thana
- Kairwan Karanpur, Dehradun
- Kairwan Malkot, Rishikesh
External Links
Kairu
Kairu is a village in Tosham tehsil of the Bhiwani district in the Indian state of Haryana. Located between the cities of Bahal and Bhiwani, it is the home of maharana pratap Memorial Herbal Park, Kairu and Chinkara Breeding Centre Kairu, Bhiwani run byKairouan
Kairouan (Arabic: القيروان Qeirwān, also known as al-Qayrawan), is the capital of the Kairouan Governorate in Tunisia.Kairuku grebneffi
Kairuku grebneffi is an extinct species of giant penguin. It is among the tallest and heaviest penguins attested to, weighing 50% more than modern emperor penguins.Kairuku
Kairuku is an extinct genus of penguin. It contains two species, K. grebneffi and K. waitaki. This taxon is known from bones from 27 MYA (late Oligocene), from the Kokoamu Greensand Formation of New Zealand.