This MCQ module is based on: Global Warming, India Concerns & Exercises
Global Warming, India Concerns & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: Global Warming, India Concerns & Exercises
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Chapter 4 · Climate — Global Warming, NCERT Exercises & Chapter Summary
Climate is never frozen in time. The earth has gone through ice ages and warm interglacials; it is changing even now, but so slowly that the change can only be read across decades. Today, however, the natural pace of change is being amplified by humans. This final part of Chapter 4 looks at global warming — its mechanism, its consequences for India, and what a 50 cm rise in sea level might mean for our coasts. Then we work carefully through the full set of NCERT exercises with model answers, and close with a chapter summary and key terms.
4.15 Climate Change in the Long Run
Change is the law of nature. Climate has changed in the past at both global and local scales, and it is changing even now — but the change is imperceptible. Geological evidence makes it clear that, once upon a time, much of the earth was buried under thick ice cover. We are now living through one of the warmer phases of that long history. What is new is that the natural pace of change has been overlaid by a human signal of unprecedented strength.
4.16 Global Warming — The Greenhouse Effect
You have probably heard the on-going debate around global warming?. Apart from natural causes, large-scale industrialisation and the build-up of polluting gases in the atmosphere are also major factors. The temperature of the world is significantly increasing.
4.16.1 The Main Greenhouse Gases
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) produced by human activity is the major source of concern. Released to the atmosphere in large quantities by the burning of fossil fuels, it is increasing gradually. Other gases — present in much smaller concentrations — are also important contributors:
- Methane (CH₄)
- Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
- Nitrous oxide (N₂O)
Together with carbon dioxide, these are known as greenhouse gases?. They are better absorbers of long-wave radiation than carbon dioxide, and so are even more effective at enhancing the greenhouse effect, molecule for molecule. The contribution of these gases to global warming is significant.
4.16.2 Consequences of Global Warming
It is widely said that, due to global warming, the polar ice caps and mountain glaciers will melt and the volume of water in the oceans will rise. The mean annual surface temperature of the earth has increased over the past 150 years. By the year 2100, global temperature is projected to rise by about 2°C. This rise will trigger many other changes:
Figure 4.C: Indicative trend of global mean surface temperature anomaly (illustrative). Final value is the projected 2100 anomaly of about +2°C.
4.16.3 Concerns Specific to India
- Himalayan glacier retreat: the rivers Ganga, Indus and Brahmaputra all draw a substantial part of their lean-season flow from glacial melt. As glaciers shrink, the long-term water security of north India is at stake.
- Monsoon variability: rising sea-surface temperatures over the Indian Ocean may be making the monsoon both wetter overall and more unstable — fewer rainy days but more extreme rainfall events.
- Heat-wave intensity: the loo months are getting hotter and lasting longer, with adverse impacts on agricultural workers and outdoor labourers.
- Cyclone behaviour: warmer Bay of Bengal waters fuel more intense tropical cyclones.
- Sea-level threat to deltas: the Sundarbans, Krishna, Godavari and Kaveri deltas are among the world's most exposed flood-prone regions.
The greenhouse effect is sometimes called both "essential for life on earth" and "the cause of catastrophic climate change". Both statements are true. In a 6–7 sentence response, evaluate this paradox: explain (i) why the natural greenhouse effect is necessary, (ii) why human enhancement of it is harmful, and (iii) what a 2°C rise by 2100 would specifically imply for India's monsoon-dependent agriculture.
Imagine you are a climate scientist living in the year 2100. Write a 250-word "letter to the past" — addressed to a class-11 student in 2026 — describing what worked, what failed and what you wish had been done about global warming. Reference at least three specific Indian features (e.g. Mawsynram, Sundarbans, Himalayan glaciers, Coromandel cyclones).
4.17 NCERT Exercises — with Model Answers
Q1. Multiple-Choice Questions
(i) What causes rainfall on the coastal areas of Tamil Nadu in the beginning of winters?
- (a) South-West monsoon
- (b) Temperate cyclones
- (c) North-Eastern monsoon
- (d) Local air circulation
(ii) What is the proportion of area of India which receives annual rainfall less than 75 cm?
- (a) Half
- (b) One-third
- (c) Two-third
- (d) Three-fourth
(iii) Which one of the following is not a fact regarding South India?
- (a) Diurnal range of temperature is less here.
- (b) Annual range of temperature is less here.
- (c) Temperatures here are high throughout the year.
- (d) Extreme climatic conditions are found here.
(iv) Which one of the following phenomenon happens when the sun shines vertically over the Tropic of Capricorn in the southern hemisphere?
- (a) High pressure develops over north-western India due to low temperatures.
- (b) Low pressure develops over north-western India due to high temperatures.
- (c) No changes in temperature and pressure occur in north-western India.
- (d) 'Loo' blows in the north-western India.
Q2. Answer in About 30 Words
(i) What is the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone?
(ii) What is meant by 'bursting of monsoon'? Name the place of India which gets the highest rainfall.
(iii) Which type(s) of cyclones cause rainfall in north-western India during winter? Where do they originate?
Q3. Answer in Not More Than 125 Words
(i) Notwithstanding the broad climatic unity, the climate of India has many regional variations. Elaborate this statement giving suitable examples.
Temperature contrasts: in summer, the mercury touches 55°C in western Rajasthan but only 19°C at Tawang on the same June day. In winter, Drass (Ladakh) drops to −45°C while Thiruvananthapuram stays around 22°C.
Rainfall contrasts: Cherrapunji and Mawsynram receive over 1,080 cm annually while Jaisalmer rarely exceeds 9 cm. The Ganga delta is hit by storms every third or fifth day in July–August, while the Coromandel coast stays dry.
Seasonal contrasts: while north India shivers in January, peninsular south India shows hardly any seasonal change. These regional variations are all sub-types of the same monsoon climate, produced by latitude, altitude, distance from sea, relief and the path of monsoon branches.
(ii) How many distinct seasons are found in India as per the Indian Meteorological Department? Discuss the weather conditions associated with any one season in detail.
The South-west Monsoon Season begins in early June. Intense low pressure over north-west India attracts the SE trade winds across the equator; after deflection, they become south-westerlies. The monsoon "bursts" with violent thunder and lightning, dropping day temperatures by 5–8°C between mid-June and mid-July. It approaches India in two branches:
• Arabian Sea branch — splits into three sub-branches; the Western Ghats sub-branch causes 250–400 cm of rain on the windward slope and a rain-shadow east of the Ghats.
• Bay of Bengal branch — deflected by the Arakan Hills, enters Bengal from the south-east, splits into a westward arm along the Ganga plains and a north-eastward arm up the Brahmaputra valley; its sub-branch hits the Garo-Khasi hills (Mawsynram).
Tamil Nadu coast remains dry because it lies parallel to the Bay of Bengal branch and in the rain-shadow of the Arabian Sea branch.
Project / Activity
On the outline map of India, show the following:
- Areas of winter rain
- Wind direction during the summer season
- Areas having less than 15°C temperature in January
- Isohyte of 100 cm
- Areas of winter rain — shade Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, western UP, Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal (from western disturbances) and the Tamil Nadu coast / southern Andhra Pradesh / south-east Karnataka / south-east Kerala (from north-east monsoon).
- Summer wind direction — draw arrows showing south-westerlies hitting the Western Ghats, the Saurashtra/Kachchh strand striking westward Rajasthan, and the Bay of Bengal branch curving up from the SE through Bengal and bifurcating along the Ganga and Brahmaputra valleys.
- Areas with January temperature < 15°C — shade the Himalayan belt (J&K, Himachal, Uttarakhand high zones), most of Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, western UP, and high parts of north-east India (Sikkim, Arunachal high reaches).
- 100 cm isohyte — draw a single line that runs roughly along: north Gujarat → eastern MP → northern Bihar → West Bengal → eastern hills, separating the medium-rainfall belt (> 100 cm to the east/south of the line) from the low-rainfall belt (< 100 cm to the west/north).
4.18 Chapter Summary
Weather vs Climate
Weather is the momentary state of the atmosphere; climate is the long-period average. India has a hot monsoon climate with great regional variations — 55°C in Rajasthan summer, −45°C around Leh winter; 1,080 cm at Mawsynram, 9 cm at Jaisalmer.Climatic Controls
Latitude (Tropic of Cancer through middle), altitude (Agra 16°C vs Darjiling 4°C in January), distance from sea, the Himalayan shield, ocean currents, relief and the seasonal pressure-and-wind cycle together make India's climate.Monsoon Mechanism
The ITCZ shifts to about 20–25°N in July, becoming a monsoon trough; SE trades cross the equator between 40°E–60°E, become SW monsoon; the easterly jet stream at 15°N triggers the burst over Kerala by 1 June, engulfing all India by mid-July.El Niño & Southern Oscillation
Warm Pacific currents off Peru once every 3–7 years (El Niño) distort equatorial circulation and weaken the Indian monsoon. La Niña does the opposite. The pressure difference between Tahiti and Port Darwin tracks the Southern Oscillation; IMD forecasts use 16 indicators.Four IMD Seasons
Cold (Dec–Feb), Hot (Mar–May, with Loo, mango showers, blossom showers, Nor'westers/Kal Baisakhi), SW monsoon (Jun–Sep, with Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal branches), Retreating (Oct–Nov, with October heat and Andaman cyclones).Rainfall Distribution
Average about 125 cm. High (> 200 cm): West coast, Western Ghats, NE hills. Medium (100–200 cm): southern Gujarat, eastern TN, Odisha–Jharkhand–Bihar belt. Low (50–100 cm): western UP, Punjab, Haryana, Deccan. Inadequate (< 50 cm): western Rajasthan, Ladakh.Köppen Climate Regions
Amw (west coast south of Goa), As (Coromandel), Aw (Peninsular plateau), BShw (NW Gujarat, parts of W Rajasthan), BWhw (extreme W Rajasthan), Cwg (Ganga plain), Dfc (Arunachal), E (high Himalayas).Monsoon & Economy
Monsoon is the axis of Indian agriculture (about 64% of population dependent). Variability brings droughts and floods every year. Sudden bursts cause soil erosion. Winter rainfall by temperate cyclones is highly beneficial for rabi crops.Global Warming
Carbon dioxide, methane, CFCs and nitrous oxide trap long-wave radiation. By 2100, global temperature is projected to rise by about 2°C and sea level by an average 48 cm. India faces glacier retreat, monsoon variability, intensified cyclones and delta inundation.4.19 Key Terms — Quick Glossary
Competency-Based Questions — Global Warming & Whole Chapter Synthesis
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.