ICSE
Geography Class 10 Syllabus
There
is one paper of two hours duration carrying 80 marks and Internal
Assessment of 20 marks. The Paper consists of two parts - Part I and
Part II.
Part
I (compulsory) consists of two questions. Question 1 is based on Topographical
Map. Question 2 is based on outline Map of India. In Part II, you are
expected to answer any five questions.
Part - I: Map Work
1. Interpretation of Topographical Maps
a.
Identification of simple landforms marked by contours, triangulated height,
spot heights, surveyed trees, bench marks, relative height and colour
tints or other symbols on a topographical survey of India map.
b.
Measuring distances using the scale given therein and marking directions
between different locations, using eight cardinal points
and indicated bearings.
c.
Marking the site of prominent villages and/or towns, types of land use and
means of communication with the help of the index given at the bottom of
the sheet.
d.
Identification of drainage and settlement patterns.
2 Map of India
A
question is set to locate and label on an outline map of India. You
are expected to locate and label the following items - mountains,
plateaus, plains, rivers and water bodies, towns, coastal features,
minerals, rainfall and wind
Mountains and Plateaus: Himalayas, Karakoram,
Aravali, Vindhyas, Satpura, Western and Eastern Ghats, Nilgiris, Garo,
Khasi, Jaintia. Deccan, Chota Nagpur, Malwa Plateaus.
Plains: Indo-Gangetic
Plains, Coastal plains - Konkan, Malabar, Coromandal and the
Northern Circar.
Rivers: Indus,
Ravi, Beas, Chenab, Jhelum, Satluj, Ganga, Yamuna, Ghaghra,
Gomti, Gandak, Kosi, Chambal, Betwa, Son, Damodar, Bhrahmaputra,
Narmada, Tapti, Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna and Cauveri, Tungabhadra.
Water Bodies: Gulf
of Kutch, Gulf of Khambhat, Gulf of Mannar, Palk Strait, Andaman Sea
and Chilka Lake.
Passes: Karakoram,
Nathu-La Passes.
Latitude and Longitudes: Tropic
of Cancer, Standard Meridian (82° 30’E).
Direction of Monsoon Winds: South
West (Arabian and Bay of Bengal Branches) North East Monsoon.
Distribution of Minerals: Oil
- Mumbai High (Offshore Oil Field) Digboi. Iron - Singhbhum, Coal
- Jharia.
Soil Distribution -
Alluvial, Laterite, Black and Red Soil.
Towns - Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata,
Chennai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Kochi, Srinangar, Vishakhapatnam,
Allahabad.
Population -
Distribution of Population (Densely and sparsely).
Part - II: Geography of India
3. Location, Extent and Physical features
Position
and Extent of India. (through Map only)
The
physical features of India - mountains, plateaus, plains and rivers
(through Map only)
4. The climate of India
Distribution
of temperature, rainfall, winds in summer and winter and the factors
affecting the climate of the area. Monsoon and its mechanism.
Seasons
– March to May – hot and dry summer; June to September – South West
Monsoon; October to November - retreating monsoon. December to
February – cool and dry winter.
Map
showing distribution of temperature, rainfall, and monsoon winds.
5. Soils in India
Types
of soils (alluvial, black, red and laterite), composition and
characteristics such as colour, texture, minerals, crops associated, soil
erosion – causes, prevention and need for conservation.
6. Natural vegetation of India
Types
of vegetation (tropical evergreen, tropical deciduous, tropical desert,
littoral and mountain), distribution and correlation with
their environment, uses of important trees, need for conservation and
various measures.
7. Water Resources
Importance
of irrigation, means of irrigation, need for conservation, rain water
harvesting. and its importance.
8. Minerals in India
Coal,
petroleum, iron ore, manganese, bauxite, limestone – uses and their
distribution.
9. Agriculture in India
Types
of agriculture in India: shifting, subsistence, intensive, extensive, plantation, mixed,
commercial. Indian Agriculture – problems and solutions.
Agricultural
seasons (rabi, kharif, zayad), climatic conditions, soil, methods of
cultivation, processing and distribution of the
following crops:
- - rice, wheat, millets and pulses.
- - sugarcane, oilseeds.
- - cotton, jute, tea, coffee, rubber.
10. Industries in India: -
Agro based Industry and Mineral based Industry.
Agro
based Industry - Sugar, Cotton Silk, Woollen and Jute Textiles.
Mineral
based Industry - Iron, Steel, Heavy Engineering, Petro Chemical and
Electronics.
11. Transport
Roads – Express
Highways, National highways, Golden Quadrilateral, Railway – Narrow,
Metre, Broad gauge, Air ways, Water ways – Major Sea Ports Advantages
and disadvantages of these transport.
12. Waste generation and management
(a)
Sources of waste - domestic,
industrial, agricultural, Municipal, Medical and nuclear
plants. Domestic waste: paper, glass, plastic, rags, kitchen waste,
etc.
Industrial:
mining operations, cement factories, oil refineries, construction units.
Agricultural:
plant remains, animal waste, processing waste.
Municipal:
sewage, degradable and non-degradable waste from offices, etc.
Biomedical waste:
needles, syringes, soiled dressings, pathological waste
from hospitals, medical labs.
Nuclear waste:
radioactive waste.
(b) Impact of waste accumulation -
spoilage of landscape, pollution, health hazards, effect on
terrestrial, aquatic (fresh water and marine) life. Self-explanatory.
(c)
Need for management of waste. Self-explanatory.
(d)
Methods of safe disposal of waste - segregation, dumping,
composting, drainage, treatment of effluents before discharge,
incineration, use of scrubbers and electrostatic
precipitators. Segregation of domestic waste into biodegradable and
non-biodegradable by households; sweeping from gardens to
be converted to compost; sewage treatment plants, incinerators in
group housings.
(e)
Need for reducing, reusing and recycling waste. Methods would involve
governmental, social and individual initiatives.
Governmental
initiatives: not building large dams for generating hydro electric
power which leads to less land being submerged and less displacement
of people. Improving efficiency of existing technologies
and introducing new ecofriendly technologies.
Social
initiatives: creating awareness and building trends of sensitive use of
resources and products, e.g. reduced use of electricity, etc.
Individual:
developing an ethical environmental consciousness e.g. refusing
use of polybags, styrofoam containers, etc; reusing: plastic and
glass containers; recycling: e.g. paper – this will reduce demand on
wood and save trees.
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