Map literacy is a quiet, high-return skill in the paper. CAPF tests it through latitude-and-longitude basics, the location and extent of India, the Standard Meridian and Indian Standard Time, simple time-zone and date-line calculations, the idea of map scale, the main projections, and the reading of contours and conventional symbols. For a future officer these are also field skills: reading a topographic sheet, fixing a position, estimating distance, and understanding a grid reference. The treatment follows NCERT Class XI Practical Work in Geography and India: Physical Environment, and the descriptive cartography in G.C. Leong.
- Latitude: angular distance north or south of the equator (0°), measured from 0 to 90° at the poles. Lines of latitude are called parallels; they run east-west, are equal and parallel, and shrink toward the poles. The equator is the only great circle among them; the rest are small circles.
- Longitude: angular distance east or west of the Prime Meridian (0°, at Greenwich), from 0 to 180°. Lines of longitude are called meridians; they run north-south, converge at the poles, and are all great circles (semicircles). The 180-degree meridian is the basis of the International Date Line.
- A great circle divides the globe into two equal halves (the equator, every meridian-and-its-antimeridian pair) and gives the shortest distance between two points on the globe (the "great-circle route" used in aviation).
- One degree of latitude is about 111 km everywhere; one degree of longitude is about 111 km at the equator but shrinks to zero at the poles (multiply by the cosine of the latitude).
- Equator (0°), Tropic of Cancer (about 23.5° N), Tropic of Capricorn (about 23.5° S), Arctic Circle (about 66.5° N), Antarctic Circle (about 66.5° S).
- Prime Meridian (0°, Greenwich) and the 180-degree meridian (near the date line).
- India lies entirely in the Northern and Eastern Hemispheres, between about 8° 4 minutes N and 37° 6 minutes N latitude, and about 68° 7 minutes E and 97° 25 minutes E longitude.
- The Tropic of Cancer (about 23.5° N) passes through the middle of the country, through eight States.
- The mainland's north-south and east-west extents are each about 3,200 km. From east to west the country spans roughly 30° of longitude, so the local time differs by about two hours between Arunachal Pradesh and the Rann of Kutch.
- India adopts a single time zone based on the Standard Meridian of India, 82° 30 minutes E, which passes near Mirzapur (Uttar Pradesh).
- Indian Standard Time (IST) is therefore 82.5 multiplied by 4 minutes ahead of Greenwich, that is 5 hours 30 minutes ahead of GMT / UTC (IST = UTC + 5:30).
- The rule behind this: the earth turns 360° in 24 hours, so 15° of longitude equals 1 hour, and 1 degree equals 4 minutes of time. Places to the east are ahead in time; places to the west are behind.
To find the time at place B given the time at place A:
- Find the longitude difference between A and B.
- Convert to time at 4 minutes per degree (or 1 hour per 15°).
- If B is to the east of A, add the difference; if to the west, subtract.
Worked example: if it is 12:00 noon at Greenwich (0°), the time at the Indian Standard Meridian (82.5° E) is 82.5 multiplied by 4 minutes = 330 minutes = 5 hours 30 minutes ahead, so 5:30 p.m. IST.
The International Date Line near 180° marks the calendar-day change: crossing it travelling westward you advance the date by one day; travelling eastward you put it back one day. The line bends around island groups so that a single country keeps one date.
Scale is the ratio of map distance to ground distance. Three ways to express it:
- Statement (verbal): "1 cm to 1 km".
- Representative Fraction (RF): a pure ratio, for example 1:50,000 (one unit on the map equals 50,000 of the same units on the ground); it is unit-free and the most useful.
- Linear (graphic) scale: a divided line drawn on the map, which stays valid even when the map is enlarged or reduced.
A large-scale map (small RF denominator, for example 1:10,000) shows a small area in great detail; a small-scale map (large RF denominator, for example 1:1,000,000) shows a large area with little detail. The Survey of India topographic sheets are the standard large-scale Indian maps.
A projection transfers the curved earth onto a flat sheet; every projection distorts something (area, shape, distance or direction), and the choice depends on purpose:
| Projection |
Property preserved |
Typical use |
| Mercator (cylindrical) |
Shape and direction (conformal); rhumb lines are straight |
Navigation; badly exaggerates area near the poles |
| Cylindrical equal-area |
Area |
Thematic distribution maps |
| Conical |
Good for mid-latitudes |
Maps of a single country or belt |
| Azimuthal / zenithal |
Direction from the centre |
Polar and aviation maps |
| Homolosine / interrupted |
Area, with less shape distortion |
World thematic maps |
The key trade-off to remember: the Mercator projection keeps shape and bearings (good for navigation) but grossly enlarges high latitudes (Greenland looks larger than Africa, though Africa is many times bigger).
- Contour lines join points of equal height above sea level; the contour interval is the vertical gap between them. Closely spaced contours mean a steep slope; widely spaced contours a gentle slope. V-shaped contours pointing uphill mark a valley or stream; closed loops with the highest value inside mark a hill.
- Conventional signs: standard symbols for roads, railways, settlements, rivers, forests, and so on, given in the map legend.
- Colours: blue for water, green for vegetation, brown for relief (contours), black for man-made features, red for major roads.
- The grid and grid reference: a numbered grid lets a point be given as a coordinate (eastings before northings, "along the corridor and up the stairs"), the basis of military and survey position-fixing.
- A bearing is the angle of a direction measured clockwise from north (true, magnetic or grid north).
Map and grid skills are core to the work of a uniformed officer. The Survey of India topographic sheets, grid references, contour reading, and bearings are the language of patrolling, search-and-cordon operations, and disaster response, where a position has to be fixed and communicated quickly and unambiguously. Time-zone awareness matters for coordinating with formations and agencies across the country and abroad. The Standard Meridian and IST give one national clock, but the real two-hour spread of local time between the eastern and western limits is why there is a recurring debate about a second time zone for the north-east. Modern position-fixing uses satellite systems (GPS and India's own NavIC / IRNSS), which sit on the same latitude-longitude framework. See india physiography and india borders neighbours and strategic geography.
Formats: the value of the Standard Meridian of India and the IST offset; time-difference and date-line calculation; the property preserved by the Mercator projection; large-scale versus small-scale maps; the meaning of close versus wide contour spacing; great circle versus small circle; how many degrees equal one hour of time.
Authored practice (not verbatim PYQs):
Q1The Standard Meridian of India is:
- A75° E
- B80° E
- C82° 30 minutes E
- D90° E
Answer:
- C. 82° 30 minutes E (near Mirzapur); IST is UTC + 5:30.
Q2One degree of longitude corresponds to a time difference of:
- A1 minute
- B4 minutes
- C15 minutes
- D1 hour
Answer:
- B. 360° in 24 hours gives 15° per hour, so 1 degree equals 4 minutes.
Q3On the Mercator projection, the feature most distorted is:
- Athe shape of small areas
- Bcompass direction
- Cthe area of high-latitude regions
- Dthe path of rhumb lines
Answer:
- C. Mercator preserves shape and bearings but grossly enlarges polar-area regions.
Q4Closely spaced contour lines on a topographic map indicate:
- Aa gentle slope
- Ba steep slope
- Cflat land
- Da water body
Answer:
- B. Close spacing means a steep slope; wide spacing a gentle one.
Q5A great circle is best described as:
- Aany line of latitude
- Bany line of longitude only at the equator
- Ca circle that divides the globe into two equal halves
- Da small circle near the poles
Answer:
- C. The equator and every meridian-antimeridian pair are great circles, giving the shortest route.
Q6If it is 12:00 noon at Greenwich, the Indian Standard Time is:
- A4:30 p.m.
- B5:00 p.m.
- C5:30 p.m.
- D6:00 p.m.
Answer:
- C. IST is 5 hours 30 minutes ahead of GMT.
- Latitude (north-south position, parallels) versus longitude (east-west position, meridians). Parallels run east-west; meridians run north-south.
- All meridians are great circles; among parallels only the equator is a great circle.
- 1 degree of longitude equals 4 minutes of time; 15° equals 1 hour.
- IST is based on 82.5° E and is UTC + 5:30; do not confuse the meridian value (82.5 E) with the offset (5:30).
- Large-scale map (small RF denominator) shows a small area in detail; small-scale shows a large area.
- Mercator preserves shape and direction (good for navigation) but distorts area; equal-area projections do the reverse.
- Crossing the date line westward advances the date; eastward sets it back.
- Standard Meridian: "82.5 E gives five-and-a-half" (IST = UTC + 5:30).
- Time rule: "Four minutes a degree, fifteen degrees an hour."
- Lines: "Lat is flat (east-west), Long is long (pole to pole)."
- Contours: "Close = steep, wide = gentle."
- Scale: "Large scale, small place; small scale, large place."
- Latitude (parallels, east-west) is 0 to 90°; longitude (meridians, north-south) is 0 to 180°.
- All meridians are great circles; only the equator among parallels is a great circle.
- India: about 8° N to 37° N, 68° E to 97° E; Tropic of Cancer through the middle.
- Standard Meridian of India is 82.5° E; IST is UTC + 5:30.
- 1 degree of longitude equals 4 minutes of time; 15° equals 1 hour; east is ahead.
- The date line near 180° changes the calendar day (west = add a day).
- Mercator keeps shape and bearings but enlarges high latitudes; equal-area keeps area.
- Close contours mean a steep slope; wide contours a gentle slope.
- Latitude is measured north-south (parallels, 0 to 90°); longitude east-west (meridians, 0 to 180°).
- The equator and every meridian-antimeridian pair are great circles; the great-circle route is the shortest.
- India lies between about 8° N and 37° N and 68° E and 97° E, wholly north and east of the origin.
- The Tropic of Cancer crosses the middle of India, through eight States.
- The Standard Meridian of India is 82° 30 minutes E (near Mirzapur); IST is UTC + 5:30.
- The earth turns 15° of longitude in one hour, so 1 degree equals 4 minutes; places to the east are ahead.
- The International Date Line near 180° changes the calendar day, bending around island groups.
- Scale may be a statement, a representative fraction (RF), or a linear scale; the RF is unit-free.
- A large-scale map shows a small area in detail; a small-scale map shows a large area.
- The Mercator projection preserves shape and bearings (for navigation) but exaggerates polar areas.
- Contour lines join equal heights; close spacing is a steep slope and wide spacing a gentle slope.
- Grid references, bearings and contour reading are core field skills for patrolling and disaster response.
- Latitude / longitude: angular distance north-south of the equator / east-west of the Prime Meridian.
- Parallel / meridian: a line of equal latitude (east-west) / equal longitude (north-south).
- Great circle / small circle: a circle dividing the globe into equal halves / one that does not.
- Standard Meridian: the reference longitude on which a country's standard time is based (82.5 E for India).
- Indian Standard Time (IST): the national clock, UTC + 5:30.
- International Date Line: the line near 180° where the calendar date changes.
- Scale / representative fraction (RF): the map-to-ground ratio / its unit-free fractional form.
- Projection: a method of representing the curved earth on a flat sheet, always with some distortion.
- Mercator projection: a conformal projection that preserves shape and bearings but distorts area.
- Contour line / contour interval: a line of equal height / the vertical gap between such lines.
- Grid reference: a coordinate locating a point on a numbered map grid (eastings then northings).
- Bearing: a direction measured clockwise from north.