Hydrosphere: ICSE Class 9 Geography solution
Get notes, summary, questions and answers, MCQs, extras, and PDFs of Chapter 11 “Hydrosphere” which is part of ICSE Class 9 Geography (Morning Star/Total) textbook/workbook answers. However, the notes should only be treated as references and changes should be made according to the needs of the students.
Summary
The Earth looks blue from space because about 71 percent of it is covered in water. This water, in all its forms – oceans, rivers, lakes, underground, and in the air – is called the hydrosphere. Water moves around the Earth in a process called the water cycle.
Most of the Earth’s water, about 97 percent, is salty ocean water, which we cannot drink. Only 3 percent is fresh water. Much of this fresh water is frozen in ice caps. A very small amount, less than one percent, is available as fresh water in rivers, lakes, streams, and underground. Water on land comes from rain or snow, or seeps from underground, forming rivers that flow to the sea. Underground water collects beneath the land’s surface after rain or snow. Water also exists as vapor in the air, causing humidity; it evaporates from water bodies, forms clouds, and then falls as rain or snow.
Ocean water moves in three main ways: waves, tides, and currents. Waves are the up-and-down movements of the sea surface, usually caused by wind. Tides are the regular rise and fall of sea level. They are caused by the gravitational pull of the Moon and the Sun. When the water level rises and moves towards the coast, it is high tide. When it falls and moves away, it is low tide. The Earth has two high tides and two low tides about every 24 hours and 50 minutes. The Moon’s distance from Earth changes; it is farthest at apogee and nearest at perigee, which affects tides. When the Sun, Earth, and Moon are in a line (during new moon or full moon), their combined gravity causes very high tides called spring tides. When the Sun and Moon are at a right angle to the Earth, their gravity works against each other, causing weaker tides called neap tides.
Ocean currents are like large rivers of water flowing in the oceans. They can be warm or cold. Warm currents flow from warm parts of the world near the equator towards the colder polar regions. Cold currents flow from polar regions towards the equator. Currents are caused by differences in water temperature and saltiness, the Earth’s rotation, winds, and the shape of landmasses. For example, the Gulf Stream is a warm current in the Atlantic Ocean that helps keep Western Europe warmer than it would otherwise be. The North Atlantic Drift is part of this system. The Labrador Current is a cold current in the Atlantic that brings cold water and icebergs south. The Kuroshio Current, also known as the “Black Stream” because of its dark blue water, is a warm current in the Pacific that warms Japan. The Oyashio Current is a cold Pacific current that meets the Kuroshio, creating rich fishing areas but also fog.
Ocean currents greatly affect climate. Warm currents bring warmer temperatures and more rain to coastal areas. Cold currents bring cooler, drier weather. Where warm and cold currents meet, fog often forms, and these areas are usually rich in fish because plankton, tiny sea organisms that fish eat, grow well there. Currents also affect shipping; ships can travel faster with a current or slower against it. Cold currents can carry dangerous icebergs into shipping lanes.
Textbook solutions (Morning Star/Total)
Multiple-Choice Questions
1. Hydrosphere refers to the combined mass of water
(a) in the oceans
(b) rivers, streams and lakes
(c) in the atmosphere
(d) All of the above.
Answer: (d) All of the above.
2. Ocean: 97% :: Fresh water : ______
(a) 3%
(b) 2.3%
(c) 0.7%
(d) 0.66%
Answer: (a) 3%
3. Underground water is found in:
(a) soil
(b) subsoil
(c) underground streams
(d) All of the above.
Answer: (d) All of the above.
4. Name the oscillatory movements in water, manifested by an alternate rise and fall of the sea surface.
(a) Tides
(b) Waves
(c) Spheres
(d) Oscillations
Answer: (b) Waves
5. Apogee : Earth-moon distance ______ :: Perigee : Earth-moon distance ______
(a) maximum, minimum
(b) minimum, maximum
(c) equal, equal
(d) All of the above.
Answer: (a) maximum, minimum
6. ______ flow from the lower latitudes towards the higher latitudes.
(a) Warm currents
(b) Cold currents
(c) Surface currents
(d) Deep water currents
Answer: (a) Warm currents
7. Which amongst the following is NOT one of the causes of Ocean Currents?
(a) Level of Salinity
(b) Temperature
(c) The Earth’s Revolution
(d) Planetary Winds
Answer: (c) The Earth’s Revolution
8. Name the winds that blow between the Equator and the Tropics.
(a) Westerlies
(b) Trade Winds
(c) Monsoon Winds
(d) Summer Winds
Answer: (b) Trade Winds
9. What is the direction of air circulation over the oceans in the middle latitudes?
(a) Cyclonic
(b) Hemispherical
(c) Spherical
(d) Anticyclonic
Answer: (d) Anticyclonic
10. Name the warm Atlantic Ocean Current which keeps the ports of Great Britain ice free even in winters.
(a) The West Atlantic Drift
(b) The East Atlantic Drift
(c) The North Atlantic Drift
(d) The South Atlantic Drift
Answer: (c) The North Atlantic Drift
11. Which current is also known as the ‘Black Stream?
(a) Atlantic current
(b) Kuroshio current
(c) Oyashio current
(d) Newfoundland current
Answer: (b) Kuroshio current
12. Name the current that keeps the hub of world trade, the Port of Montreal, open all year round.
(a) Gulf Stream
(b) Labrador current
(c) Canaries current
(d) Florida current
Answer: (a) Gulf Stream
13. Which currents have created one of the world’s richest fishing grounds?
(a) Labrador current and Gulf stream
(b) Labrador current and Irminger current
(c) Oyashio current and Kuroshio current
(d) Both (a) and (c).
Answer: (d) Both (a) and (c).
14. Currents influence which of the following?
(a) temperature
(b) rainfall
(c) fish population
(d) all of the above.
Answer: (d) all of the above.
Short Answer Questions
1. Name any two ways in which movement of ocean water takes place.
Answer: Two ways in which the movement of ocean water takes place are through waves and currents. (Alternatively: waves and tides, or currents and tides).
2. What are tides? Name one factor that causes tides.
Answer: Tides are the rise and fall of sea water due to gravitational forces. One factor that causes tides is the gravitational force of the moon.
3. What is the time interval between tides? Name the factors responsible for this time interval.
Answer: On average, a place experiences tides twice a day, with each tide being delayed by 26 minutes compared to the previous day. A particular tide centre takes 24 hours and 52 minutes to come under the moon again, with another tide on the opposite side occurring after 12 hours and 26 minutes. The factors responsible for this time interval are the Earth’s rotation and the moon’s revolution around the Earth.
4. What are Spring and Neap tides?
Answer: Spring Tides are very high tides that occur when the sun, the moon, and the Earth are almost in the same line (during full moon and new moon). Neap Tides are tides with a lower range than normal, occurring when the sun, the Earth, and the moon form a right angle (during the seventh or eighth day of each fortnight).
5. Name two types of ocean currents based on their temperature. Give an example of each.
Answer: Based on their temperature, two types of ocean currents are Warm Currents and Cold Currents. An example of a Warm Current is the Gulf Stream, and an example of a Cold Current is the Labrador Current.
6. For what is the Gulf Stream famous?
Answer: The Gulf Stream is famous for being a powerful, warm, and swift Atlantic Ocean current that originates in the Gulf of Mexico. It influences the climate of the east coast of North America and Western Europe, making them warmer, and is also a potential source of renewable power.
7. What happens when warm and cold currents meet?
Answer: When warm and cold currents meet, dense fog often occurs. This meeting point also frequently creates rich fishing grounds due to the mixing of waters and concentration of nutrients. Violent storms can also follow the line where these currents meet.
8. Mona had gone to visit her friend’s boat on the Visakhapatnam jetty. She was surprised to see that the boats seemed to have sunk because the water level in the jetty was low and the gangways to the boats were almost vertical. As a student of geography name and explain the phenomena that caused this.
Answer: The phenomenon Mona observed is an ebb tide, which results in low tide water. Tides are the periodic rise and fall of sea levels. When the sea water falls and moves towards the sea, it is called an ebb, and the resultant low water level is known as low tide water. This makes the boats appear lower and the gangways steeper.
Structured Questions
1. (a) How are tides formed?
Answer: Tides are formed primarily due to the gravitational forces exerted by the moon and, to a lesser extent, the sun on the Earth’s waters. The part of the Earth facing the moon experiences a strong gravitational pull, causing the water to bulge outwards, creating a high tide. A similar high tide occurs on the opposite side of the Earth due to the reactionary (centrifugal) force related to the Earth-moon system’s rotation.
(b) Differentiate between High Tides and Low Tides.
Answer: High tide refers to the rise of sea water and its movement towards the coast, leading to the highest water level reached during a tidal cycle. Low tide (or ebb tide) refers to the fall of sea water and its movement away from the coast towards the sea, leading to the lowest water level reached during a tidal cycle.
(c) Give a reason for each of the following:
(i) There are two high and two low tides in a day.
Answer: Most coastal locations experience two high tides and two low tides in approximately 24 hours and 50 minutes. This is because as the Earth rotates on its axis, a point on its surface passes through two tidal bulges (causing high tides) and two tidal troughs (causing low tides) created by the moon’s gravitational pull and the associated centrifugal force.
(ii) Each day a tide is delayed by 26 minutes.
Answer: Each successive high or low tide at a particular location is typically delayed by about 26 minutes (or the entire cycle by about 52 minutes daily) because the moon revolves around the Earth in the same direction that the Earth rotates. So, by the time the Earth completes one rotation, the moon has moved slightly in its orbit, and the Earth has to rotate a little longer for the same point to be directly under or opposite the moon again.
(iii) The tidal range differs from one waterbody to the other.
Answer: The tidal range, which is the difference in height between high tide and low tide, varies significantly from one waterbody to another. This variation is due to factors such as the shape and depth of the ocean basin, the configuration of the coastline, the presence of estuaries, and the relative positions of the sun and moon, which affect the strength of the gravitational forces.
(d) Draw a well labelled diagram showing the formation of spring and neap tides.
Answer: See Fig. 11.4 and Fig. 11.5 of Morning Star/Total Geography book or click here.
2. (a) Describing the two types of ocean currents based on their temperature.
Answer: Ocean currents are broadly divided into two types based on their temperature:
Warm Currents: These currents originate in low latitudes (tropical zones) and flow towards higher latitudes (temperate and sub-polar zones). They carry warm water into colder regions. An example is the Gulf Stream.
Cold Currents: These currents originate in high latitudes (polar regions) or are driven by upwelling of deep cold water, and flow towards lower latitudes (warm equator region). They carry cold water into warmer regions. An example is the Labrador Current.
(b) State any two factors responsible for causing the currents.
Answer: Two factors responsible for causing ocean currents are:
- Differences in Temperature: Warmer water is less dense and tends to rise and flow over colder, denser water. This temperature difference creates movement.
- Planetary Winds: Prevailing winds like the Trade Winds and Westerlies exert a force on the surface of the ocean, dragging the water and causing it to move in the direction of the wind, thus forming currents.
(c) Give a reason for each of the following:
(i) Warm currents produce a milder climate.
Answer: Warm currents produce a milder climate in the coastal regions they flow past because they transport large amounts of warm water from tropical areas to cooler, higher latitudes. The air above these warm currents also gets heated and carries warmth and moisture, moderating the temperatures of adjacent landmasses, especially during winter.
(ii) The eastern coasts of USA are comparatively cold.
Answer: The north-eastern coasts of the USA are comparatively cold, particularly in winter, due to the influence of the cold Labrador Current. This current brings frigid water southward from the Arctic Ocean, significantly cooling the adjacent coastal areas.
(iii) The coasts of Norway are not frozen in winter whereas its adjoining coasts are frozen for most parts of the year.
Answer: The coasts of Norway remain largely ice-free in winter, despite their high latitude, due to the warming influence of the North Atlantic Drift. This warm current, an extension of the Gulf Stream, brings relatively warm waters to the region, preventing the sea from freezing. Adjoining areas not reached by this warm current can be ice-bound.
(d) Describe one effect of each of the following three ocean currents.
(i) Labrador Current of the Atlantic Ocean.
Answer: One significant effect of the Labrador Current is its transportation of icebergs from the glaciers of Greenland southward into the trans-Atlantic shipping lanes, especially in spring and early summer, posing a hazard to navigation.
(ii) The Kuroshio current
Answer: One effect of the warm Kuroshio Current is that it sustains the coral reefs of Japan, enabling them to exist as the northernmost coral reefs in the world.
(iii) Oyashio Current of the Pacific Ocean.
Answer: One effect of the Oyashio Current is that its cold, nutrient-rich waters create some of the world’s richest fishing grounds due to the high concentration of nutrients and favorable conditions for marine life.
3. (a) State the origin and flow of the Gulf Stream.
Answer: The Gulf Stream originates in the Gulf of Mexico. It flows out through the Straits of Florida, then moves northeastward along the eastern coast of the United States. Near Newfoundland, it continues across the Atlantic Ocean, where it broadens and becomes known as the North Atlantic Drift as it moves towards Europe.
(b) What is the effect of Gulf Stream on the coasts of North America and Western Europe?
Answer: The Gulf Stream has a significant warming effect on the climate of the east coast of North America, from Florida to Newfoundland. Its extension, the North Atlantic Drift, makes the climate of Western Europe (including the British Isles and Scandinavia) much milder than it would otherwise be at such high latitudes, keeping ports ice-free in winter and supporting agriculture.
(c) Give a reason for each of the following:
(i) The waters of the Oyashio Current form the richest fishing grounds in the world.
Answer: The waters of the Oyashio Current form exceptionally rich fishing grounds primarily because of the extremely high nutrient content of its cold water. Additionally, very high tides in some areas (up to ten metres) further enhance the availability of these nutrients, supporting a vast amount of marine life, which in turn supports large fish populations.
(ii) There is heavy rainfall in Queensland but the Atacama desert is arid.
Answer: Queensland, on the eastern coast of Australia, receives heavy rainfall partly due to the warm East Australian Current (driven by South-East Trade Winds), which brings warm, moist air to the coast, leading to precipitation. Conversely, the Atacama Desert on the western coast of South America is extremely arid partly due to the influence of the cold Peru Current. This cold current cools the air above it, reducing its capacity to hold moisture and leading to very little rainfall.
(iii) Rich fishing grounds are located on the Pacific coast of North America.
Answer: Rich fishing grounds can be located on the Pacific coast of North America due to factors influenced by ocean currents. Cold currents, like the California Current, can bring nutrient-rich waters from deeper ocean layers towards the surface (a process often associated with upwelling), which supports large populations of plankton, the base of the marine food web. Areas where different currents meet can also concentrate these food sources, attracting fish.
(d) Describe three major effects of currents.
Answer: Three major effects of ocean currents are:
- Influence on Climate: Currents significantly affect the temperature and rainfall of coastal regions. Warm currents bring milder, wetter conditions to higher latitudes, while cold currents can lead to cooler, drier conditions, sometimes contributing to desert formation.
- Impact on Marine Organisms: Currents transport nutrients and plankton, which are essential for marine life. The meeting points of warm and cold currents are often rich fishing grounds because they concentrate these food sources.
- Effect on Commerce and Navigation: Warm currents can keep ports in high-latitude regions ice-free throughout the year, facilitating trade. Historically, currents have also aided or hindered sailing ships depending on their routes and the direction of the currents. Cold currents can transport icebergs, posing a hazard to shipping.
Thinking Skills
1. You are watching the sea waves from the balcony of a seaside resort in Mumbai on a New Moon Day. Suddenly you noticed rise of sea water and its movement towards the coast. What was this wave and after how much time will it be repeated?
Answer: The phenomenon I observed is a high tide. Since it is a New Moon Day, it is likely a spring tide, which is a particularly high tide. This high tide will generally be followed by a low tide, and then another high tide will occur approximately 12 hours and 26 minutes later.
2. Imagine that the Ocean Currents stop flowing. What would be its consequences for the human beings?
Answer: If ocean currents stopped flowing, the consequences for human beings would be severe and far-reaching:
Climatic Extremes: Temperatures in equatorial regions would become significantly hotter, and temperate and polar regions would become much colder, as the currents would no longer redistribute solar heat around the planet. This would drastically alter weather patterns, leading to more extreme droughts, floods, and storms.
Collapse of Marine Ecosystems: The transport of nutrients that supports plankton growth would cease. Since plankton forms the base of the marine food web, fish populations would decline drastically, leading to widespread food shortages for communities dependent on seafood and a collapse of the fishing industry.
Agricultural Disruption: Changes in temperature and rainfall patterns would make many current agricultural regions unproductive, threatening global food security.
Impact on Coastal Communities: Sea levels might change unpredictably in different regions, and coastal climates would be severely affected, impacting human settlements.
Practical/Map Work
On an outline map of the world name and show the direction of one warm and one cold current each of the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean.
Answer: Do it yourself. Here are the instructions:
- First, take a blank outline world map (you can print it or draw a simple one with the continents and oceans labelled).
- Use coloured pencils or pens—one colour for warm currents and another for cold currents.
For the Pacific Ocean:
- Warm Current – Kuroshio Current (Japan Current):
- Locate Japan on the map.
- Draw an arrow starting near the east coast of Taiwan going northeast past Japan.
- Label it “Kuroshio Current” and mark it as warm.
- Cold Current – Oyashio Current:
- Locate the eastern part of Russia (near Kamchatka Peninsula).
- Draw an arrow starting from the Bering Sea down southwards past the eastern coast of Japan.
- Label it “Oyashio Current” and mark it as cold.
For the Atlantic Ocean:
- Warm Current – Gulf Stream:
- Locate the Gulf of Mexico.
- Draw an arrow from the Gulf of Mexico through the Florida Strait, up the east coast of the USA, and then curving towards Western Europe.
- Label it “Gulf Stream” and mark it as warm.
- Cold Current – Labrador Current:
- Locate the area between Greenland and Canada (Labrador region).
- Draw an arrow moving southwards along the east coast of Canada towards Newfoundland.
- Label it “Labrador Current” and mark it as cold.
Tips:
- Use a key or legend to show which colour represents warm and cold currents.
- Make sure arrows clearly show the direction of flow.
- Keep your labelling neat and clear.
Extras
Additional MCQs
1. What percentage of Earth’s surface is covered in water?
A. 61%
B. 71%
C. 81%
D. 91%
Answer: B. 71%
2. What term refers to the combined mass of water found on Earth?
A. Lithosphere
B. Biosphere
C. Atmosphere
D. Hydrosphere
Answer: D. Hydrosphere
3. What process describes the movement of water around, over and through the Earth?
A. Water cycle
B. Carbon cycle
C. Nitrogen cycle
D. Rock cycle
Answer: A. Water cycle
4. Approximately what percentage of Earth’s water is found in oceans?
A. 23%
B. 50%
C. 97%
D. 100%
Answer: C. 97%
5. Of the 3% non-oceanic water on Earth, what percentage is locked in polar ice caps?
A. 0.7%
B. 0.3%
C. 2.3%
D. 2.7%
Answer: C. 2.3%
6. Which percentage of Earth’s water is available as fresh surface water in rivers, lakes and streams?
A. 0.03%
B. 0.3%
C. 3%
D. 30%
Answer: A. 0.03%
7. What name is given to water collected under the surface of land that transmits water readily?
A. Aquifer
B. Glacier
C. Estuary
D. Watershed
Answer: A. Aquifer
8. Which form of water is present in the atmosphere?
A. Liquid
B. Ice
C. Vapour
D. Snow
Answer: C. Vapour
9. What term describes oscillatory movements in water with an alternate rise and fall of the sea surface?
A. Tides
B. Currents
C. Waves
D. Ebb
Answer: C. Waves
10. What causes tides on Earth?
A. Wind
B. Gravitational forces
C. Coriolis effect
D. Temperature difference
Answer: B. Gravitational forces
11. What is the term for the highest water level reached during a tide?
A. Ebb
B. Low tide
C. High tide
D. Tide range
Answer: C. High tide
12. What does the term ‘ebb’ refer to?
A. Rise of sea water
B. Fall of sea water
C. Wave crest
D. Wave trough
Answer: B. Fall of sea water
13. What is the difference between high tide and low tide called?
A. Trough
B. Tide range
C. Tide current
D. Tide cycle
Answer: B. Tide range
14. At which point in its orbit is the Moon farthest from the Earth?
A. Perigee
B. Apogee
C. Solstice
D. Equinox
Answer: B. Apogee
15. At which point in its orbit is the Moon nearest to the Earth?
A. Apogee
B. Perigee
C. Perihelion
D. Aphelion
Answer: B. Perigee
16. How many high tides and ebbs does a location experience in 24 hours?
A. One
B. Two
C. Three
D. Four
Answer: B. Two
17. During which lunar phases do the highest tides occur?
A. First and third quarter
B. Full and new moon
C. Waxing gibbous and waning gibbous
D. Waxing crescent only
Answer: B. Full and new moon
18. When the Sun and Moon are at right angles to Earth, which tides occur?
A. Spring tides
B. Neap tides
C. King tides
D. Diurnal tides
Answer: B. Neap tides
19. By how much is a normal tide delayed each day?
A. 12 minutes
B. 26 minutes
C. 52 minutes
D. 24 hours
Answer: B. 26 minutes
20. What is the average time interval between successive tides at a given location?
A. 6 hours
B. 12 hours
C. 12 hours 26 minutes
D. 24 hours
Answer: C. 12 hours 26 minutes
21. What type of tide is approximately 20% higher than normal tides?
A. Neap tide
B. Spring tide
C. King tide
D. Ebb tide
Answer: B. Spring tide
22. What type of tide is approximately 20% lower than normal tides?
A. Neap tide
B. Spring tide
C. Anoxic tide
D. Diurnal tide
Answer: A. Neap tide
23. What term describes large masses of surface water circulating in regular patterns in oceans?
A. Waves
B. Tides
C. Currents
D. Gyres
Answer: C. Currents
24. Which currents flow from tropical zones towards temperate and sub-polar zones?
A. Cold currents
B. Warm currents
C. Deep currents
D. Ebb currents
Answer: B. Warm currents
25. Which currents bring cold water from polar regions towards the equator?
A. Deep currents
B. Warm currents
C. Cold currents
D. Surface currents
Answer: C. Cold currents
26. What percentage of ocean water is constituted by surface currents?
A. 10%
B. 50%
C. 90%
D. 100%
Answer: A. 10%
27. Which currents make up about 90% of ocean water moving around basins?
A. Surface currents
B. Deep water currents
C. Warm currents
D. Gyres
Answer: B. Deep water currents
28. Which factor increases water density and affects current flow?
A. Temperature decrease
B. Salinity increase
C. Wind speed
D. Depth decrease
Answer: B. Salinity increase
29. What effect does warmer water temperature have on currents?
A. It makes currents colder
B. It causes currents to sink
C. It causes warm currents to flow polewards
D. It increases salinity
Answer: C. It causes warm currents to flow polewards
30. In the Northern Hemisphere, currents are deflected in which direction due to Earth’s rotation?
A. Left
B. Right
C. North
D. South
Answer: B. Right
31. Which winds blow between the Equator and the Tropics and influence ocean currents?
A. Westerlies
B. Trade winds
C. Polar easterlies
D. Monsoon winds
Answer: B. Trade winds
32. Which winds drive the Gulf Stream towards western Europe?
A. Trade winds
B. Monsoon winds
C. Westerlies
D. Polar easterlies
Answer: C. Westerlies
33. Which currents reverse direction in the North Indian Ocean due to seasonal winds?
A. Equatorial currents
B. Monsoon currents
C. Continental currents
D. Polar currents
Answer: B. Monsoon currents
34. What effect do land masses have on ocean currents?
A. Increase speed
B. Decrease salinity
C. Obstruct and divert flow
D. Change temperature
Answer: C. Obstruct and divert flow
35. From which body of water does the Gulf Stream originate?
A. Mediterranean Sea
B. Gulf of Mexico
C. North Sea
D. Bay of Bengal
Answer: B. Gulf of Mexico
36. Into which ocean does the Gulf Stream split around 30° W, 40° N?
A. Pacific Ocean
B. Indian Ocean
C. Arctic Ocean
D. Atlantic Ocean
Answer: D. Atlantic Ocean
37. Which current keeps the ports of Western Europe ice-free in winter?
A. Labrador Current
B. North Atlantic Drift
C. East Australian Current
D. California Current
Answer: B. North Atlantic Drift
38. Which cold current flows south along Labrador and Newfoundland coasts?
A. Gulf Stream
B. Labrador Current
C. Kuroshio Current
D. Oyashio Current
Answer: B. Labrador Current
39. Where do the Labrador and Gulf Stream currents meet producing fog?
A. Grand Banks
B. Strait of Gibraltar
C. Cape of Good Hope
D. Bering Strait
Answer: A. Grand Banks
40. Which current flows north-eastward off Taiwan past Japan?
A. Peru Current
B. Kuroshio Current
C. Benguela Current
D. Canary Current
Answer: B. Kuroshio Current
41. What name is given to the Kuroshio Current in English translation?
A. Black Stream
B. Blue Stream
C. Japan Loop
D. Pacific Drift
Answer: A. Black Stream
42. Which branch of the Kuroshio Current enters the Sea of Japan?
A. Tsushima Current
B. Oyashio Current
C. North Pacific Current
D. California Current
Answer: A. Tsushima Current
43. Which cold current flows southward through the Bering Sea to Japan?
A. Gulf Stream
B. Oyashio Current
C. North Atlantic Drift
D. East Australian Current
Answer: B. Oyashio Current
44. Which current’s cold waters bring icebergs into trans-Atlantic shipping lanes?
A. Labrador Current
B. Gulf Stream
C. Benguela Current
D. Kuroshio Current
Answer: A. Labrador Current
45. Which current sustains the world’s northernmost coral reefs?
A. North Atlantic Drift
B. East Australian Current
C. Kuroshio Current
D. Oyashio Current
Answer: C. Kuroshio Current
46. What effect do warm currents have on coastal climates?
A. Lower temperatures
B. Increase ice cover
C. Raise temperatures
D. Reduce rainfall
Answer: C. Raise temperatures
47. Which current contributes to heavy rainfall on western Europe?
A. Labrador Current
B. East Australian Current
C. North Atlantic Drift
D. California Current
Answer: C. North Atlantic Drift
48. Which cold current contributes to the aridity of the Atacama Desert?
A. Canary Current
B. Benguela Current
C. Peru Current
D. Oyashio Current
Answer: C. Peru Current
49. What phenomenon occurs when warm and cold currents meet, condensing water vapour?
A. Hurricane
B. Tsunami
C. Dense fog
D. Spring tide
Answer: C. Dense fog
50. Which type of storms follow the line where warm and cold currents meet?
A. Tornadoes
B. Hurricanes
C. Monsoons
D. Tropical cyclones
Answer: B. Hurricanes
51. Which organisms form the base of the marine food chain and feed on organic material moved by currents?
A. Plankton
B. Coral
C. Fish
D. Algae
Answer: A. Plankton
52. What effect do ocean currents have on maritime commerce year-round?
A. Freeze harbours
B. Unfreeze harbours
C. Change port names
D. Increase piracy
Answer: B. Unfreeze harbours
53. Which hazard in cold currents poses danger to ships?
A. Sharks
B. Icebergs
C. Coral reefs
D. High waves
Answer: B. Icebergs
54. Which term describes sea waves produced by tides?
A. Tsunami
B. Tidal waves
C. Trade winds
D. Ebb currents
Answer: B. Tidal waves
55. Which force causes the outward bulge of water on Earth opposite the Moon?
A. Gravitational force
B. Centrifugal force
C. Coriolis force
D. Frictional force
Answer: B. Centrifugal force
56. Around what shape orbit does the Earth revolve around the Sun?
A. Circular
B. Elliptical
C. Parabolic
D. Hyperbolic
Answer: B. Elliptical
57. What primarily drives deep water currents around ocean basins?
A. Wind stress
B. Temperature and density differences
C. Tides
D. Earth’s rotation
Answer: B. Temperature and density differences
58. Which current warms the eastern coast of Australia?
A. West Wind Drift
B. East Australian Current
C. Benguela Current
D. Canary Current
Answer: B. East Australian Current
59. Which current cools the western coast of South America?
A. Peru Current
B. Gulf Stream
C. Kuroshio Current
D. East Australian Current
Answer: A. Peru Current
60. In which hemisphere do ocean currents circulate anticlockwise?
A. Northern
B. Southern
C. Eastern
D. Western
Answer: B. Southern
61. Which cold current flows along the western coast of South Africa?
A. Labrador Current
B. Benguela Current
C. Kuroshio Current
D. Gulf Stream
Answer: B. Benguela Current
62. Which current helps keep Alaska’s southern ports ice-free in winter?
A. Oyashio Current
B. Labrador Current
C. Kuroshio Current
D. Gulf Stream
Answer: C. Kuroshio Current
63. Monsoon winds cause North Indian Ocean currents to reverse between which directions?
A. Northeast and southwest
B. Northwest and southeast
C. East and west
D. North and south
Answer: A. Northeast and southwest
64. What percentage of Earth’s total water is found as groundwater?
A. 97%
B. 3%
C. 0.66%
D. 0.03%
Answer: C. 0.66%
65. Which process converts water vapour into clouds?
A. Evaporation
B. Condensation
C. Precipitation
D. Transpiration
Answer: B. Condensation
66. What term describes the process of water turning into vapour from water bodies?
A. Condensation
B. Precipitation
C. Evaporation
D. Infiltration
Answer: C. Evaporation
67. What is the maximum depth of major surface currents?
A. 100 m
B. 200 m
C. 400 m
D. 800 m
Answer: C. 400 m
68. What is the circulation of water among atmosphere, hydrosphere and lithosphere called?
A. Biogeochemical cycle
B. Hydrological cycle
C. Carbon cycle
D. Rock cycle
Answer: B. Hydrological cycle
69. What can water on Earth only do according to its cycle?
A. Be created
B. Be destroyed
C. Be transformed
D. Be produced
Answer: C. Be transformed
70. Which cold current flows southward along North America’s western coast?
A. Labrador Current
B. California Current
C. Kuroshio Current
D. Benguela Current
Answer: B. California Current
71. The North Atlantic Drift is a branch of which larger current?
A. California Current
B. Gulf Stream
C. Labrador Current
D. Kuroshio Current
Answer: B. Gulf Stream
72. What causes violent storms where the Gulf Stream meets the Labrador Current?
A. Warm water
B. Fog
C. Meeting of warm and cold currents
D. High salinity
Answer: C. Meeting of warm and cold currents
73. Which port remains unfrozen year-round due to the North Atlantic Drift?
A. Vancouver
B. Montreal
C. Halifax
D. Toronto
Answer: B. Montreal
74. Which current is often considered the Pacific’s equivalent of the Gulf Stream?
A. California Current
B. Kuroshio Current
C. Oyashio Current
D. North Pacific Current
Answer: B. Kuroshio Current
75. Which reservoir holds the smallest proportion of Earth’s water?
A. Oceans
B. Polar ice caps
C. Surface fresh water
D. Groundwater
Answer: C. Surface fresh water
76. Which current divides at Cape Sao Roque into North Equatorial and Brazil Currents?
A. South Equatorial Current
B. Gulf Stream
C. California Current
D. West Wind Drift
Answer: A. South Equatorial Current
77. At approximately which latitude does the Gulf Stream divide into separate currents?
A. 20° N
B. 30° N
C. 40° N
D. 50° N
Answer: C. 40° N
78. Which current is formed when Kuroshio and Oyashio Currents meet?
A. Labrador Current
B. North Pacific Current
C. California Current
D. East Australian Current
Answer: B. North Pacific Current
79. The low point of a sea wave is called the:
A. Crest
B. Ridge
C. Trough
D. Bulge
Answer: C. Trough
80. The high point of a sea wave is called the:
A. Crest
B. Trough
C. Ridge
D. Bulge
Answer: A. Crest
Additional Assertion and Reason
1. Assertion (A): The Earth appears blue when viewed from outer space.
Reason (R): Approximately 71 per cent of the earth is covered in water.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
2. Assertion (A): Ocean water is generally unfit for human consumption and other uses.
Reason (R): Ocean water has a high salt content.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
3. Assertion (A): Waves on the surface of the sea are mainly produced by winds.
Reason (R): Waves are oscillatory movements in water, manifested by an alternate rise and fall of the sea surface.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
4. Assertion (A): High tide occurs on the side of the Earth facing the Moon.
Reason (R): The surface of the earth facing the moon experiences maximum gravitational force of the moon, attracting and pulling up the water.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
5. Assertion (A): A high tide is also formed at the opposite side of the Earth simultaneously.
Reason (R): This is because of the reactionary (centrifugal) force of the gravitational (centripetal) force of the moon causing outward bulge of the water.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
6. Assertion (A): Each day, a tide at a particular location is delayed by 26 minutes compared to the previous day.
Reason (R): The Moon revolves around the Earth while the Earth rotates, causing the relative position of the tide-producing force to shift.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
7. Assertion (A): Spring Tides are very high tides.
Reason (R): Spring tides occur when the Sun, the Moon, and the Earth are almost in the same line, causing their gravitational forces to work together.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
8. Assertion (A): Neap Tides are lower in height than normal tides.
Reason (R): Neap tides occur when the Sun, the Earth, and the Moon are in the position of quadrature (form a right angle), causing their tide producing forces to work in opposite directions.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
9. Assertion (A): Warm ocean currents flow from low latitudes towards high latitudes.
Reason (R): They bring warm water into cold water areas.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
10. Assertion (A): Water with less salinity flows over denser saline water.
Reason (R): Higher salinity of ocean water makes it denser.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
11. Assertion (A): Dense fog often occurs where warm and cold ocean currents meet.
Reason (R): The warm air above the warm current condenses when it meets the cold air above the cold current.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
12. Assertion (A): Harbours in Western Europe remain ice-free in winter.
Reason (R): This is due to the influence of the warm North Atlantic Drift.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
13. Assertion (A): The combination of the Labrador Current and the Gulf Stream creates one of the world’s richest fishing grounds.
Reason (R): This meeting point also produces heavy fogs.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
14. Assertion (A): Cold currents discourage rainfall along coastal areas.
Reason (R): Examples include the Atacama desert along the western coast of South America and the Kalahari desert along the western coast of South Africa.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
15. Assertion (A): The Oyashio Current forms very rich fishing grounds.
Reason (R): The cold water of the Oyashio Current has extremely high nutrient content.
(a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(b) Both A and R are true but R does not explain A.
(c) A is true but R is false
(d) A is false but R is true
Answer: (a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.