Plant E seems to be some Geranium. Plants B and F belong to Rosaceae. Possible genera are Potentilla, Sibbaldia, or Fragaria, but resolution of the photos is not sufficient.
Now, with these bigger photos, it is clear that plant D belongs to Fabaceae. Probably this is Astragalus or Oxytropis, but without flowers or fruits it seems to be impossible to identify this plant from a photo. In a fresh plant, characters of stipules or hair types probably would be helpful.
The bigger photos certainly help! A is, as Jose says, Polygonum affine; C is Nepeta cf laevigata; D is Astragalus sp., E is Geranium wallichianum, and B and F, as everyone agrees, is a Potentilla. sorry about misidentifying the Astragalus as a Potentilla.
Kris, Linda, Franz, Ayyappan, Sarah, Peter, José I am very grateful for all your help. Your help is priceless for my research about zoogenic erosion in Miyar Valley.
BTW, in the future I will also ask you for help with my other research project about experimental trampling (research methodology after Cole) also in this valley.
I visited the valley in 2010. I am not a botanist, but the vegetation scientists from Wildlife Insitute of India (WII) have worked on vegetation of Western Himalaya and have surveyed Myar valley.
I suggest you to personally contact them and send the pictures. Dr. G.S. Rawat- WII, Dr. Ishwari Roy- WII and Dr. Gajendra Singh, Uttarakhand Space Application Centre
Image A depicts Polygonum sp. of family Polygonaceae, the image E is that of Geranium species of Geraniaceae family whereas the image F depicts Potentilla sp. of family Rosaceae.