The abandoned alignment from Pamban to Dhanushkodi proves useful for a tractor
6701 finally draws into Rameshwaram station, which is surprisingly bigger than ecpected.
Cyclone destroyed track near the old Rameshwaram Road station
The road to Dhanushkodi is technically a national highway! Allegedly, it uses the old railway alignment.
Empty shells are all that remain at Dhanushkodi - this water tank is the only discernible railway remnant.
A view of the church and station from Dhanushkodi's beach
Not a single structure was left undamged in the '64 cyclone, not even the large buildings in the diatance
Looking south from the old town towards land's end. Palk Bay is just visible to the left, showing how narrow the promontory is today.
Looking north towards the station and the cove that provides a safe harbour to the small boats of the fishermen who live amidst the ruins
Samudra Sangam or Land's End at Dhanushkodi. Sri Lanka is just over the horizon.
The cenotaph for the cyclone victims at Munramchattram
Sunset at Munramchattram
The Sethu Express is shunted to the pit line at Rameshwaram
Pilgrims, mostly from the north, throng the watrfront at Rameshwaram
The all-white Gopuram of the Ramalingesvara Temple at Rameshwaram