- a. Cartography
- b. Demography
- c. Anthropology
- d. Epigraphy
Demography is the scientific study of populations, including their size, structure, distribution and changes (birth, death, migration).
b
- a. Railways
- b. Roadways
- c. Airways
- d. Waterways
Roadways provide direct access to homes and businesses and offer door-to-door pickup and delivery, unlike other modes that require terminals.
b
- a. 5846 km
- b. 5942 km
- c. 5630 km
- d. 5800 km
The Golden Quadrilateral connecting Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata covers approximately 5,846 km.
a
- a. Cartography
- b. Demography
- c. Anthropology
- d. Epigraphy
Demography studies population characteristics such as size, distribution, composition and changes due to birth, death and migration.
b
- a. Railways
- b. Roadways
- c. Airways
- d. Waterways
Road transport gives door-to-door connectivity and is most flexible for short-distance movement of people and goods.
b
- a. 5846 km
- b. 5942 km
- c. 5630 km
- d. 5800 km
The Golden Quadrilateral network length is about 5,846 km, linking the four major metropolitan cities.
a
- a. Bengaluru
- b. Chennai
- c. Delhi
- d. Hyderabad
The NRSC, part of ISRO, is based in Hyderabad and handles remote sensing data reception and processing.
d
- a. Roadways
- b. Railways
- c. Airways
- d. Waterways
Air transport (including helicopters) is best suited for inaccessible, mountainous or remote areas lacking road or rail links.
c
- a. Air India
- b. Indian Airlines
- c. Vayudoot
- d. Pavan Hans
Pawan Hans (often spelled Pavan/Pawan Hans) is the government-owned company known for providing helicopter services in India.
d
- a. Cement
- b. Jewells
- c. Tea
- d. Petroleum
India imports large quantities of crude oil and petroleum products to meet its energy needs; petroleum is a major import item.
d
Types: (1) By distance: Internal (within country) and International (across countries). (2) By duration: Temporary, Seasonal, Permanent. (3) By reason: Voluntary (for work, education) and Forced (displacement). (4) By direction: Rural–urban, Urban–rural, Rural–rural, Urban–urban.
Migration is the movement of people from one place to another for settlement temporarily or permanently.
Railways transport large volumes of goods and many passengers efficiently, are relatively safe, have fixed schedules, and are less affected by weather compared to roads.
Four advantages: (1) Suitable for heavy and bulk goods transport, (2) Economical for long distances, (3) High carrying capacity and safety, (4) All-weather and energy-efficient.
Notes: Pipelines are economical, safe, continuous and energy-efficient for moving liquids and gases. Major pipelines transport crude oil from ports to refineries and finished products to consumption areas; natural gas pipelines have expanded for fertiliser, power and domestic use. Limitations include high initial cost and fixed routes.
Pipeline transport in India mainly carries crude oil, petroleum products, natural gas and LPG through an extensive network linking refineries, ports and consumption centres.
These rivers and their linked canals form the principal inland water transport routes; NW-1 (Ganga–Hooghly), NW-2 (Brahmaputra) and NW-3 (West coast/State waterways) are important nationally designated waterways.
Major inland waterways: the Ganga–Bhagirathi–Hooghly system, the Brahmaputra, the Godavari, the Krishna, the Mahanadi and the Narmada.
Classification by medium: Print (newspapers, books), Electronic (radio, TV), Telecommunication (telephone, mobile), Satellite and Internet communication. Each type serves different needs—mass media, real-time, long-distance, or interactive communication.
Communication is the exchange of information between people or places. Types include verbal (oral/written) and non-verbal; and by medium: print, electronic (telegraph, telephone, radio, TV), and digital (internet, satellite).
It includes exports (selling to other countries) and imports (buying from other countries), allows countries to obtain goods not available domestically, exploit comparative advantage and increase market size.
International trade is the exchange of goods and services across national borders between residents of different countries.
Roads connect remote and rural areas, support passenger and freight movement over short distances, and complement other transport modes to form an integrated network.
Merits of roadways: (1) Door-to-door service and high accessibility, (2) Flexible routes and schedules, (3) Economical for short distances and passenger transport, (4) Low initial investment compared to rail for local connectivity, (5) Essential for rural access and last-mile delivery.
Problems of urbanization: overcrowding and slum growth, inadequate housing, unemployment and underemployment, traffic congestion, pollution (air, water, noise), strain on water supply and sanitation, inadequate health and educational services, and pressure on infrastructure.
Urbanization is the increasing proportion of a country's population living in urban areas, driven by migration, natural growth and reclassification of rural areas.
Importance: supports telecommunication and broadcasting (TV, radio), internet backhaul and connectivity for rural/remote areas, weather forecasting and disaster warning, remote sensing for agriculture and resource management, navigation and GPS services, telemedicine and distance education, and national security/defence communications.
Satellite communication enables long-distance, reliable transmission of data, voice and video across India, including remote regions.
Explanation: National Highways connect major cities and states; State Highways link important cities within states; District Roads connect taluks and towns to state highways; Rural and village roads provide last-mile connectivity to villages. Expressways are high-speed, access-controlled corridors for fast inter-city travel.
Roadways in India are classified as National Highways, State Highways, District Roads and Rural/Village Roads (including Panchayat/PMGSY roads) and Expressways.
Using chapter context and common facts: • Border Roads Organisation → 1960 (BRO was established/commissioned around 1960). • INSAT → Satellite communication (INSAT is India’s multipurpose satellite system). • Mazagaon (Mazagon) Dock → Mumbai (Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders is located in Mumbai). • Urban sprawl → Impact of urbanization (urban sprawl is an effect/impact of urbanization). • NHAI → 1955 (OCR shows '1955' remaining; however the National Highways system and institutional dates are garbled in the scan — NHAI as an authority was established later). Please verify the 5th pairing from the original textbook page because the scanned columns are shifted.
1 — e (1960); 2 — a (Satellite communication); 3 — d (Mumbai); 4 — b (Impact of urbanization); 5 — c (1955) [last pair uncertain in OCR]
1. Personal communication vs Mass communication
- Personal communication: Direct, two-way, between individuals or small groups (e.g., telephone call, face-to-face). Usually immediate feedback and private.
- Mass communication: One-to-many, uses media to reach large, heterogeneous audiences (e.g., TV, newspapers). Feedback is limited and delayed; content is public.
2. Print media vs Electronic media
- Print media: Tangible texts (newspapers, magazines, books). Slower dissemination, permanent record, good for detailed reporting.
- Electronic media: Transmit via electronic signals (TV, radio, internet). Rapid dissemination, audio-visual capability, wide reach, but often ephemeral.
3. Roadways vs Railways
- Roadways: Flexible origin–destination, suitable for short/medium distances and door-to-door transport, smaller capacity, affected by weather/traffic.
- Railways: High capacity, economical for bulk and long-distance freight and passengers, fixed routes and schedules, less affected by short-term weather.
4. Waterways vs Airways
- Waterways: Cheapest for heavy/bulky goods over long distances (sea/coastal/inland). Slower speed, limited by navigable routes and ports.
- Airways: Fastest mode for passengers and high-value/urgent goods, higher cost, limited cargo capacity and constrained by weather and airport locations.
5. Internal trade vs International trade
- Internal trade: Trade within a country’s borders; governed by national laws and currency; fewer customs formalities.
- International trade: Trade between countries; involves currency exchange, customs, tariffs, international regulations and agreements, and greater transport/insurance complexity.
See concise distinctions below.
Mark these on the outline map as follows (use symbols/labels and a neat legend):
1. National Highway NH-44
- Draw/mark NH-44 from Srinagar (Jammu & Kashmir, north) to Kanyakumari (Tamil Nadu, south). Indicate major cities along it (e.g., Srinagar, Jammu, Ambala/Chandigarh region, Delhi area, Agra/Bhopal/Hyderabad/Bengaluru, then Kanyakumari) to show the north–south trunk route.
2. Major seaports in India (mark on corresponding coastal locations)
- Mumbai (Maharashtra)
- Kandla/Deendayal Port (Gujarat)
- Chennai (Tamil Nadu)
- Kolkata/Hooghly (West Bengal)
- Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh)
- Paradip (Odisha)
- Kochi (Kerala)
- Tuticorin (Thoothukudi, Tamil Nadu)
(Place dots at approximate coastal positions and label each.)
3. Major international airports in India (mark city locations)
- Indira Gandhi International Airport — New Delhi
- Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International — Mumbai
- Kempegowda International — Bengaluru
- Rajiv Gandhi International — Hyderabad
- Chennai International — Chennai
- Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose — Kolkata
- Cochin International — Kochi
(Place small airplane symbols or labels at these cities.)
4. Densely populated state of India
- Mark Bihar as the most densely populated large state (highest population density as per census). You may shade/label Bihar in the eastern Gangetic plain.
5. State of highest literacy in India
- Mark Kerala (highest literacy rate among states). Shade or label Kerala on the southwest coast.
6. Railway zones of India
- Indicate major railway zones with different colors/labels. Key zones to show (examples to include on school map):
- Northern Railway (headquarters: Delhi)
- Western Railway (Mumbai)
- Central Railway (Mumbai)
- Eastern Railway (Kolkata)
- Southern Railway (Chennai)
- South Central Railway (Secunderabad/Hyderabad)
- South Western Railway (Hubballi/Bengaluru region)
- North Eastern / Northeast Frontier (Guwahati region)
- East Central, West Central, North Central, North Western, etc.
(You do not need to draw exact boundaries unless a detailed map is required—placing the zone names roughly in their geographic areas is acceptable in school map exercises.)
Notes for marking: Use a clear legend, different symbols/colors for highways, ports, airports, states, and railway zones. Label every marked point clearly.
Instructions and list of locations to mark on the outline map (see solution).