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Lecture Notes On Geography

The document discusses the universe and various celestial bodies within it such as planets, stars, galaxies and more. It then covers topics like the formation of the solar system, details about planets and other objects in the solar system. Finally, it discusses continents on Earth, their physical features and details about the Earth itself.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views

Lecture Notes On Geography

The document discusses the universe and various celestial bodies within it such as planets, stars, galaxies and more. It then covers topics like the formation of the solar system, details about planets and other objects in the solar system. Finally, it discusses continents on Earth, their physical features and details about the Earth itself.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Universe

● 95% Black Matter, 5% what we see


● Universe’s age: 13.8 billion years old
● Heliocentric model: Copernicus
● Hydrogen: most abundant element in the Universe
● The Big Bang Theory - by Georges Lemaitre; Hubble gave the evidence
● Sun’s age: 4.6 billion years old
● Milky Way: Spiral shaped (elliptical shaped galaxies are also present), first
observed by Galileo
● Solar system in the outer spiral rim of the MW galaxy
● Andromeda: our nearest galaxy
● Proxima Centauri: closest star to sun
● Solar System
○ Kant - Laplace Nebular Theory: A spinning cloud of dust made of
mostly light elements, called a nebula, flattened into a protoplanetary
disk, and became a solar system consisting of a star with orbiting
planets
○ Tidal Hypothesis: Given by Jeans and Jeffrey; tidal force of the
intruding star resulted in the ejection of a large mass from our sun,
from which planets are formed
● Sun
○ Inner Layers: Core → Radiative Zone → Convective Zone
○ Outer Layers: Photosphere → Chromosphere → Transition region → Corona
○ White dwarf
● Inner/Rocky/Terrestrial Planets: MVEM
● Outer/Jovian Planets: JSUNP
● Asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter
● Hayley’s Comet: 76 years
● Lonar lake, Maharashtra: meteorite lake
● Meteoroids (mesosphere) → enters earth’s orbit → Meteors or shooting stars →
ground impact → Meteorite
● Comets: orbit the sun
● Celestial bodies: objects that shine in the night sky
● All planets (except Venus and Uranus) rotate West to East, in ACW dirn.
● Mercury
○ No ozone layer
● Venus
○ Morning/Evening star, veiled planet, earth’s twin, lucifer
○ Longest day
○ Rotates East to West
○ Hottest & brightest planet
○ Thick acidic atmosphere
● Earth
○ Goldilock zone
○ 365 days, 6 hours, 9 minutes → seasonal changes
○ 23 hours, 56 min, 4 s, w.r.t. distant stars → day and night
○ 24 hours w.r.t. the sun
○ Most dense planet

○ A - farthest (slowest), P - nearest


● Mars
○ Iron oxide dust → Red planet; pink sky
○ No atmosphere
○ Nat. satellites: Phobos and Deimos
○ Contains the mountain: Nix Olympica
○ Recent missions: Tianwen - 1, China & Ingenuity (helicopter), NASA
● Jupiter
○ Largest
○ Fastest spinning
○ 12 years orbit
○ Winter planet
○ Ganymede: largest moon in the SS; 79 satellites
● Saturn
○ 2nd largest
○ Largest no. of satellites: 82; Titan - largest of them
○ Least dense planet
● Uranus
○ Greenish in looks due to high methane
○ Rotates E to W
○ Moons known by Shakespeare’s characters (Oberon and Titania
largest)
● Neptune
○ Twin of Uranus
○ Mild greenish
○ Triton - largest moon; Nereid - 3rd largest
● Pluto
○ International Astronomical Union - dwarf planet

The Earth
● Summer Solstice: June 21; Yoga Day
Winter Solstice: Dec. 22 (6 months later)

Spring/vernal equinox (equal day and night): March 20-21


Autumnal/Autumn equinox: September 22 (6 months later)
● Umbra: smaller shadow; Penumbra: larger shadow
● Solar Eclipse
○ Sun Moon Earth, on New Moon day
● Lunar Eclipse
○ Sun Earth Moon, on Full Moon day
● Moon
○ Huygens: tallest mountain
○ ⅙g
○ 27+⅓ days to complete orbit around the earth

Spheres of Earth
● Oblate spheroid
● Mean radius: 6,371 km
● -------: Latitude lllll: Longitude
● Latitudes
○ Horizontal lines
○ Measured in degrees; equator: 0 degree - divides earth into N.
Hemisphere and S. Hemisphere
○ Important Latitudes
■ North Pole: 90 N
■ Arctic Circle: 66+½ N in the NH
■ Tropic of Cancer: 23+½ N in the NH
■ Equator: 0
■ Tropic of Capricorn: 23+½ S in the SH
■ Antarctic Circle: 66+½ S in the SH
■ South Pole: 90 S
○ Equator passes through 8 Indian states: Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya
Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Tripura, Mizoram
○ 3 heat zones of the earth
■ Torrid
■ Temperate
■ Frigid
● Longitudes
○ Vertical lines
○ Prime Meridian: A line passing through
Royal Observatory, Greenwich (London) is
is chosen as the ref. - Prime Meridian
Greenwich mean line = PM
● East to PM: eastern hemisphere, west to PM: western hemisphere
● There are 360 degrees of the meridians.
● Longitude of PM = 0 degrees
● Length of all meridians are equal

● India: Entirely in the N. Hemisphere; between latitudes 8°4'N and 37°6'N and
longitudes 68°7'E and 97°25'E.
● The International Date Line passes through the mid-Pacific Ocean and
roughly follows a 180 degrees longitude north-south line on the Earth. It is
located halfway round the world from the PM.

Continents
● 7 continents
● Earth: 71% water, 29% continents and islands
● 97.5% of water in sears
● Asia
○ Largest, 30% of world’s area, 60% of world’s population (China and
India - 2 largest population)
○ Highest peak: Mt. Everest, 8.8 km
○ Lowest point on dry land: Shore of the Dead Sea - shared by Israel,
Palestine and Jordan; ~0.5 km BSL
○ Mountains
■ Himalayas, Urals (Russia), Kunlun, Tein Shen (China)
■ Pamir Knot - Roof of the World; China, Tajikistan and
Afghanistan
■ Tarim Basin: a basin b/w Kunlun and Tein Shen
○ Rivers
■ Ganges
■ Brahmaputra
■ Indus
■ Euphrates (Iraq)
■ Tigris (Iraq)
■ Hwang Ho - Yellow River; Sorrow of China
■ Yangtze - Asia’s largest river, 6,300 km, Three Gorges Dam
○ Deserts
■ Arabian
■ Gopi
■ Thar
○ Baikal Lake, Siberia, Russia: deepest lake in the world
● Europe
○ Asia and Europe separated by Ural mountains and Caspain Sea
○ Highest mountain in Europe: Mt. Elbrus
○ Longest lake in Europe: The Volga
○ Surrounded by water on three sides
■ Mediterranean Sea - South
■ Atlantic - West
■ Arctic - North
○ Smallest country in the world: Vatican
○ Entirely in NH
○ Peninsula of Peninsulas, Peninsula of Eurasia
○ Doesn’t have any deserts
○ Norway + Sweden + Iceland = Scandivian countries
○ Lithuania + Latvia + Estonia = Baltic states
○ Finland = land of lakes
● World’s highest mountains by continents
○ Asia: Mt. Everest (Nepal)
○ Europe: Mt. Elbrus
○ Africa: Kilimanjaro
○ North America: Denali or Mt. McKinley
○ South America: Mt. Aconcagua
○ Australia: Mt. Kosciuszko
○ Antarctica: Vinson Massif
● North America
○ 3rd largest continent
○ Disc. by Columbus in 1492 AD
○ Arctic in North, Atlantic in East and Pacific in West
○ Connected to South America through the Isthmus of Panama
○ Separated from Asia (Russia) by the Bering Strait
○ 49 degrees N latitude forms the boundary between USA and Canada
○ Mt. McKinley - largest mountain in Alaska; has active volcano
○ Lake Superior is the largest freshwater lake in the world
○ Niagara falls between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario
○ Gulf of Mexico: largest gulf in the world
○ Canada: 2nd largest country in the world after Russia
○ Grand Canyon is in the US
● South America
○ 4rth largest continent in western hemisphere
○ North: Caribbean Sea, West: Pacific Ocean, rest Atlantic Ocean
○ Mt. Aconcagua - highest peak in this continent
○ Andes mountain (fold) lies here
○ Capital of Ecuador - Quito - highest capital in the world
○ Brazil: largest country in South America
○ Amazon: most voluminous and 2nd longest river in the world;
Anacondas found here
○ Highest navigable lake: Lake Titicaca is on the border of Bolivia and
Peru
○ Angels Fall: highest waterfall in the world
○ Brazil has borders with 10 countries, every countries in SA, except
Chile and Ecuador
● Africa
○ 2nd largest continent
○ Tropic of Cancer, Equator and Tropic of Capricorn passes through it
○ Strait of Gibraltar, Mediterranean Sea, Suez Canal, Red Sea and
Arabian Sea separate Africa from Europe and Asia
○ Kilimanjaro: highest mountain peak in Africa
○ Nile: longest river in the world
■ Originates from the Lake Victoria and drains into the
Mediterranean Sea
○ Desears: Sahara, Kalahari
○ Dark continent
● Australia
○ Smallest continent, lies entirely in Southern Hemisphere
○ Island continent
○ Australia, Tasmania, New Guinea, Misool, Waigeo
○ Disc. by James Cooke in 1770
○ Coral Reef: eastern coast of Australia - known as the Great Barrier
Reef
○ Mt. Kosciusko: highest peak in Australia
○ Major desserts: Great Victoria, Great Sandy

Physical Features of India


● North: Indira Col (Siachen), South: Indira Point (Great Andaman), West: Sir
Creek (Rann of Kutch), East: Kibithu (Arunachal Pradesh)
● Kashmir to Kanyakumar: 3200 km
● The Himalayan Mountains
○ Young, fold, central axial range, runs west to east, Indus to
Brahmaputra, 2400 km, 11 states of India
○ Three parallel ranges:
■ Himadri: Northernmost, Greater Himalayas; all big peaks are
here
■ Himachal: South of Himadri, Lesser/lower/middle Himalayas;
Kashmir Valley, Kullu and Kangra valley; all famous hill stations
here; Dhauladhar Range; Pir Panchal - largest of Lower
Himalayas
■ Shiwaliks: Outermost; valley between Himachal and Shiwaliks
called as Duns - DehraDun, KotliDun, PatliDun
○ Brahmaputra - eastern boundary; after Dihang Gorge, Himalayas
bends to the south and spread easts - Purvanchal
○ Eastern-most peak of Himalayas - Namcha Barwa
○ Highest Peaks
■ K2 (largest in India, 2nd largest in the world), Kanchenjunga,
Nanda Devi Peak
○ Important passes:
■ Zoji La Pass, Ladakh - Srinagar to Leh route is here; formed due
to Indus
■ Khardung La, Chang La, Thang La, Ladakh
■ Banihal Pass, J&K (Pir Panchal)
■ Aghil Pass (Karakoram Range - Ladakh and China)), J&K;
Karakoram-Ladakh
■ Shipki La, Himachal Pradesh-China
■ BaraLacha Pass, Himachal Pradesh-Ladakh
■ Rohtang Pass, Himachal Pradesh; Atal Tunnel
■ Niti La, Uttarakhand; India-China
■ Nathu La, Sikkim
■ Jelep La, Sikkim
■ Bum La, Dihang Pass, Diphu Pass - Arunachal Pradesh
● The Northern Plains
○ Formed due to Ganga, Indus and Brahmaputra; depositional plain
○ Longitudinal division
■ Khader: new alluvial, most fertile region
■ Bhanger: largest part, old alluvial
■ Terai: Wet smarmy
■ Bhabar: pebbles and boulders; streams disappear here.
○ Regional division
■ Punjab Plain: western part; Indus and its tributaries - Jhelum,
Chenab, Ravi, Beas, Sutlej originates in the Himalayas
■ Ganga Plain: between Ghaggar and Teesta river; Haryana,
Delhi, UP, Bihar, little of Jharkhand and West Bengal
■ Brahmaputra: Eastern region; Assam and Meghalaya
● Peninsular Plateau
○ Triangle
○ Mostly made of Black soil (reggur) - igneous rock; mostly in the Deccan
Trap
○ Divided into Central
Highlands and Deccan
Plateau, with Narmada
flowing between them.
○ Central Highlands
■ Oldest folded
residual mountain:
Aravalli
■ Maikal range
connects Vindhya
and Sathpura
■ Nilgiri Hills connect
WG and EG; the
highest peak of
Nilgiri hills is
Doddabetta (2nd
highest in PP), in
Tamil Nadu
■ Anai mudi is the highest peak in the Western Ghats, and also in
the PP.
■ Kaas Plateau is in Maharashtra; Malnad and Maidan in
Karnataka
■ Mahendragiri: highest peak in the Eastern Ghats

● Indian Desert
○ Western margins of the Aravalli range
○ Luni: only large river here
● The Islands
○ Ref. printed notes
● The coasts
○ Northern part of west coast: Konkan
○ Southern part of west coast: Malabar
○ South eastern coast: Coromandel
Soil
● 8 types of soil
○ Alluvial, Black (Regur), Red & Yellow, Laterite, Arid, Saline (Usara),
Peaty, Forest
● Prevention of soil from erosion: soil conservation
● Decayed remains of living organism in the soil: humus
● Seasonal reversal of wind direction in a year: monsoon
● Alluvial Soil
○ Sandy loam to clay in nature; rich in potash, phosphoric acid and lime;
poor in humus and hence lack nitrogen and phosphor
○ Best for cultivation of cereals (rice, wheat), sugarcane, cotton, jute,
potato and vegetables
○ India is mostly covered with this soil
○ Northern Plains (Punjab, Haryana, Uttarakhand, UP, Bihar, Jharkhand,
WB, Assam) and coastal regions of peninsular regions along river
beds.
○ Two types: Khadar and Bhangar
■ Khadar: New alluvial soil; very fertile; sticky and moisture
retentive; more prone to flooding
■ Bhagar: Old soil; less fertile; sandier; less prone to flooding
● Black Soil
○ Also called as Regur soil, cotton soil
○ Derived from igneous rocks, clay and sand due to rainfall; volcanic
origin
○ For cotton, rice, wheat, sugarcane
○ Rich in Fe, Mg, CaCO3, potash; poor in phosphorus, phosphoric acid
and organic matter
○ High clay content → retains moisture for a long time; sticky when wet and
shrink when dry; during dry season develops cracks - self ploughing
○ Iron-rich granular nature → avoids water erosion
○ Most of the Deccan Plateau - Maharashtra (most black soil covered),
Gujarat, Madhya pradesh, Chattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh and some
Tamil Nadu has this soil; Deccan Trap - Basalt
● Red & Yellow Soil
○ Known as Omnibus soil; usually in low rainfall region
○ Diffusion of iron oxide in the crystalline and metamorphic rocks
○ For rice, wheat, sugarcane
○ Eastern (whole of TN) and southern Deccan plateau covered with this -
Odisha and Chattisgarh
○ Fine-grained: fertile; coarse-grained: poor in fertility due to leaching of
nutrients; respond well to fertilizers
● Laterite Soil
○ Pink/red in colour
○ High temperature + high rainfall
○ Leaching → humus content of the soil is removed; soil left with excess of iron
→ not suitable for cultivation; so fertilisers and manures are required.
○ Suitable for cashews in Kerala, TN and AP
○ Cashews, rubber, coconut, tea and coffee
○ Used for bricks
○ Abundant in Kerala, Karnataka, TN.
● Arid Soil
○ Sandy and saline, no humans and organic matter
○ Have Kankar layers in lower horizons
○ Barley and millet
● Saline Soil
○ Known as Usara soils
○ Large content of Na, K, Mg → infertile → not suitable for vegetation
● Peaty Soil
○ Heavy rainfall and high humidity; high humus content
● Forest Soil
○ Sufficient rainfall areas

Weather & Climate


● Troposphere: lowest layer (0 to 10 km); weather and climate changes occur
here
● Indian climate: Tropical monsoon type; as ToC passes through here
● Continentality: far aways from sea → extreme weather conditions and near to sea →
equitable weather conditions
● Indian Meteorological Dept. classified into 4 seasons:
○ Winter (Dec to April)
○ Summer/pre-monsoon (April - July)
○ Monsoon (June - September) - most rainfall
○ Post monsoon (Oct - Dec)
● Two seasonal winds
○ North-east monsoon - winter monsoon; blows from land to sea
○ South-west monsoon - summer monsoon; blows from sea to land;
brings most of the rainfall in India
● Retreating monsoon: During the months of October-November, the south-
west monsoon winds become weaker and start to retreat from the skies of
North India. This phase of the monsoon is known as the retreating monsoon.
● Tamil Nadu receives most of the rainfall due to the North-east and retreating
monsoon.
● Blossom shower wind: Blossoming of coffee flower
● Nor Westeros (Kalbaisakhi): Evening thunderstorm in WB and Assam
● Loo: hot dry wind
● Mawsynram in Meghalaya - wettest place on Earth
● Isobar: lines of equal pressure; dense lines → large pressure
● Isotherms: lines joining equal temperature
● Isohyets: lines joining equal rainfall at a time
● Types of climate in India
○ Tropical wet: Kerala, Lakshadweep, Andamman and Nicobar
○ Tropical savanna (summer dry): TN, AP
○ Tropical savanna (winter dry): MP, Odisha, Jharkhand, West Bengal;
most states experience this
○ Subtropical humid: Delhi, Bihar
○ Semi arid/steppers: Gujarat
○ Mountain: J&K, DehraDun
○ Desert: Rajasthan
Forests in India
● 25% of world’s forest - Taiga Forest of Siberia (Canada and Alaska) - largest
forest
● First National Forest Policy: 1962
● Andaman and Nicobar - combination of mangroves, evergreen and deciduous
forests
● Tropical Evergreen Forests or Rainforests
○ 200 cm rain; warm and wet
○ Lungs of Earth
○ Near equator
○ Mostly western slopes of western ghats or most of western ghats
○ Kerala, Karnataka and Andaman and Nicobar Islands; between Assam
and Meghalaya
● Tropical Deciduous Forests or Monsoon forests
○ 50-100 cm rain
○ Most widespread forest in India
○ Trees shed their leaves every year to conserve water
○ Sandalwood
○ Divided in Moist DF and Dry DF
● Thorns and Scrubs
○ Gujarat, Rajasthan, MP, Chhattisgarh, UP and Haryana
○ North west part of India
● Montane Forests or Mountain Forests
○ Pine
● Mangroves or Wetlands or Mangals or Tidal Forests
○ Submerged in water
○ Found in areas of coast affected by tides - tidal forests
○ Deltas of Ganga, Mahanadi, Krishna, Godhavari
○ Ganga - Brahmaputra Delta: Sundari tree; hard timber
○ Sundarbans Reserve Forest: World’s largest deltaic mangrove
○ Sunderbans delta: Dampier-Hodges line
● Sundari - Mangroves
● Sandalwood, Teak, Sal, Bamboo, Shisham, Salar, Kher, Palash, Dhokra -
Deciduous
● Babul, Eucalyptus, Kikar, Pine Mulberry, Shisham - Thorne and Deciduous

Rocks
● Core (NIFE): 3500 km - Fe and Ni found in abundant here
○ Inner Core (solid)
○ Outer Core (liquid)
● Mantle (SIMA)
● Crust (SIAL): 35 km
● 3 types of rocks: Igneous, Sedimentary and Metamorphic
● Igneous Rocks
○ Earth’s 1st crust; all other rocks are derived from this: parent/primary
rock
○ Classified as
■ Intrusive: formed inside earth’s surface - granite, dolerite
■ Extrusive: formed outside earth’s surface - gabbro, basalt
● Sedimentary Rocks
○ Formed due to deposition of sediments: lithification
○ Stratified rocks
○ Coal, limestone, chalk, sandstone, gypsum, rock salt
○ Coal ore: Anthracite (highest concentration), Bitumen, Lignite (most
harmful, brown diamond), Peat
● Metamorphic Rocks
○ Heat + pressure on rocks
○ Marble, diamond, schist, ghessis
● Marble: metamorphic
● Granite: igneous (intrusive)
● Coal: sedimentary

Minerals in India
● Chotanagpur Plateau (Gondwana rocks) - richest mineral deposits in India
● Jharkhand: Coal, Iron, Uranium and Cooking gas
● Andhra Pradesh: Ratna Garbha
● Mining near earth surface: open cast/pit/cut mining
● Coal
○ Anthracite, Bitumen, Lignite, Peat
○ 80% in Damodar Valley
○ Jharkhand (largest coal reserve in India): Jharia, Bokaro, Giridih,
Karanpur
○ Odisha: Talcher
○ West Bengal: Raniganj
○ Chattisgarh: Korba
○ Madhya Pradesh: Panch Valley and Chanda
○ Telangana: Singareni
○ Assam: Mukum
○ Tertiary coal or Brown coal found in Assam, Arunachal Pradesh,
Nagaland, Meghalaya
● Copper
○ Open cast mining
○ Madhya Pradesh: Malanjkhand Mines, Balaghat
■ Single largest Cu deposit in India
■ Largest Open Cast Cu mine in Asia
○ Rajasthan: Khetri Mines (Rajput), Jhunjhun, Alwar
○ Jharkhand: Rekha Mines, Jamshedpur; Singbhun
○ Andhra Pradesh: Agnigundala

● Bauxite
○ Odisha: Panchpatmali Mines
○ Katni Mines, Madhya Pradesh: most bauxite reserve in India
○ Gujarat, Chattisgarh and Maharashtra
● Iron
○ Ores: Hematite, Magnetite, Limonite and Siderite
○ Odisha: Mayurbanch, Rourkela, Sundargarh
○ Jharkhand: Bokaro, Jamshedpur
○ Chattisgarh: Bhilai, Bastar, Durg (very high grade iron ore)
○ Karnataka: Bhadrawati
○ West Bengal: Durgapur, Burnpur
● Coal (Korba, Chattisgarh) + Iron (Durgapur, WB) → Bhilai Steel Plant (Chattisgarh)
● Mica
○ India largest producer
○ Jharkhand - largest; followed by Rajasthan
○ Most needed in electrical industry
● Manganese and Dolomite
○ Orissa: Sundargarh
● Gold
○ Karnataka: Kohlar and Hutti
○ Andhra Pradesh
● Silver
○ Rajasthan: Udaipur (city of lakes)
● Diamond
○ Madhya Pradesh: Majhgawan in Panna
● Petroleum/crude oil
○ Rajasthan
○ Gujarat - biggest refinery in India - Reliance
○ Assam: Digboi - high grade; largest producer of mineral oil
○ Maharashtra
● Uranium
○ Yellow Cake
○ Ore: Pitchblende
○ Most exported by Niger
○ Jharkhand: Jaduguda
○ Andhra Pradesh: Tumamlapalle
● Chromite
○ Odisha
○ Jharkhand
○ Karnataka
○ Andhra Pradesh
● Thorium
○ Monazite sands of Kerala - largest
● Corundum
○ For ruby (Manikyaratnam: pink ruby) and sapphire
○ Maharashtra
● Lead, Zinc
○ Rajasthan: Zawar Mines of Udaipur (land of lakes)
● Quartz, Calcite (marble), Gypsum
○ Rajasthan
● Garnet (Ratka Mani)
○ Produced only in Rajasthan: Janakpura and Sarwar

Industry
● Tamil Nadu: largest no. of textile mills in India
● Mumbai, 1854: 1st mechanised textile mill
● Cotton Industry
○ Gujarat: Ahmedabad, Vadodara, Rajkot, Surat, Bhavnagar
○ Maharashtra: Mumbai, Sholapur, Pune, Kolhapur, Satara, Wardha,
Hajipur
● Jute
○ India largest producer in the world
○ WB: Rishra
○ AP, Bihar, UP, MP

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