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Geomorphology: Plate Tectonics, Rocks and Landforms (NCERT Geography Digest)

Original CAPF digest of plate tectonics and continental drift, rock types and the rock cycle, geomorphic processes, and landforms by agent

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Book DigestGeographyNCERTPlate TectonicsRocksLandformsGeomorphology

Continental drift and plate tectonics

  • Continental Drift (Alfred Wegener, 1912): a single supercontinent, Pangaea, surrounded by a single ocean Panthalassa, split (about 200 million years ago) into Laurasia (north) and Gondwanaland (south), which drifted to today's positions. Evidence: the jigsaw fit of the Atlantic coasts, matching rock formations and fossils across oceans (Glossopteris flora, Mesosaurus), placer gold deposits, and tillite (glacial) beds.
  • Sea-floor spreading (Harry Hess): new oceanic crust forms at mid-oceanic ridges and spreads outward, being consumed at trenches. Evidence: palaeomagnetism (symmetrical, reversing magnetic stripes either side of ridges) and the youth of oceanic crust (none older than about 200 million years).
  • Plate tectonics: the lithosphere is broken into seven major and several minor plates that move over the asthenosphere, driven by mantle convection currents. Three boundary types:
    • Divergent (constructive): plates move apart and new crust forms (the Mid-Atlantic Ridge).
    • Convergent (destructive): plates collide; oceanic plate subducts (trenches, volcanic arcs) or continents collide to raise fold mountains (the Himalayas, from the Indo-Australian and Eurasian collision).
    • Transform (conservative): plates slide past each other (the San Andreas Fault).

Rocks and the rock cycle

  • A mineral is a naturally occurring inorganic substance with a definite chemical composition; rocks are aggregates of minerals.
  • Igneous rocks form from cooling magma or lava: intrusive (slow cooling underground, coarse-grained, for example granite) and extrusive (rapid cooling at the surface, fine-grained, for example basalt). These are the "primary" rocks.
  • Sedimentary rocks form by deposition and compaction of sediments in layers (strata); they may contain fossils (sandstone, limestone, shale).
  • Metamorphic rocks form when existing rocks are altered by heat and pressure: limestone to marble, sandstone to quartzite, coal to graphite, shale to slate, granite to gneiss.
  • The rock cycle: rocks transform from one type to another over geological time.

Geomorphic processes

  • Endogenic (internal) forces build relief: diastrophism (folding, faulting, plate movement) and volcanism.
  • Exogenic (external) forces wear down relief (denudation): weathering, mass movement, erosion, transport and deposition by water, wind, ice and waves.
  • Weathering (in situ breakdown): mechanical/physical (frost action, exfoliation, thermal expansion), chemical (solution, oxidation, carbonation, hydration) and biological. Weathering prepares material for erosion and is the first step in soil formation.
  • Mass movement ranges from slow (creep, solifluction) to rapid (landslides, slumps, mudflows), a key hazard in the Himalayas.

Landforms by agent

Agent Erosional landforms Depositional landforms
Running water (humid regions) V-shaped valleys, gorges, canyons, waterfalls, potholes meanders, ox-bow lakes, flood plains, deltas, alluvial fans
Groundwater (limestone, karst) sinkholes, swallow holes, caves stalactites, stalagmites, pillars
Glaciers U-shaped valleys, cirques, aretes, horns, fjords moraines, drumlins, eskers, outwash plains
Wind (arid regions) mushroom rocks, deflation hollows, yardangs sand dunes (barchans), loess
Waves and currents (coasts) cliffs, sea caves, arches, stacks beaches, spits, bars, lagoons

How CAPF asks this

  • Which two plates raised the Himalayas (Indo-Australian and Eurasian). Type and example of plate boundaries. Evidence for sea-floor spreading.
  • Match rock to type (marble is metamorphic, basalt is igneous, limestone is sedimentary).
  • Match landform to agent (ox-bow lake to river, cirque to glacier, barchan to wind, stalactite to groundwater).

Authored practice

  1. The collision of which two plates raised the Himalayas? (Answer: the Indo-Australian and Eurasian plates.) Authored practice, not a verbatim PYQ.
  2. Marble is formed by the metamorphism of which rock? (a) sandstone (b) limestone (c) shale (d) granite. Answer: (b) limestone. Authored practice, not a verbatim PYQ.

Cross-references

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