By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Distinguish endogenic (internal) forces from exogenic (external) forces and identify which processes belong to each
  • 2Classify weathering into physical (mechanical), chemical, and biological types with examples of each
  • 3Explain mass movements: creep, flow, slide, and fall — with triggering conditions and Indian examples
  • 4Describe erosion and deposition as complementary processes and explain how both create landforms
  • 5Connect geomorphic processes to landform types in subsequent chapters (river, glacial, wind, karst)
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Why this chapter matters
Every landform you see — a mountain, a valley, a delta, a beach — was created by geomorphic processes acting over millions of years. This chapter is the 'physics' of the Earth's surface. Understanding endogenic (internal) vs exogenic (external) forces, weathering types, and mass movements explains why the Himalayas are young and rugged while the Deccan Plateau is ancient and flat — directly connecting to India's geography chapters.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Geomorphic Processes

"The face of the Earth is a canvas. The artist is never done."

1. Chapter Overview

The Earth's surface is CONSTANTLY CHANGING. This chapter explains the TWO CATEGORIES of forces that shape it: ENDOGENIC (internal — diastrophism and volcanism) which BUILD up the land, and EXOGENIC (external — weathering, mass wasting, erosion, deposition) which WEAR it down. Together, they're the GEOMORPHIC PROCESSES that create and destroy landforms.


2. Endogenic Processes (Internal — BUILD the Land)

Diastrophism (Tectonic Movements)

  • Orogenic: MOUNTAIN-BUILDING (horizontal forces → folding, faulting)
  • Epeirogenic: CONTINENT-BUILDING (vertical forces → uplift and subsidence of large areas)
  • Earthquakes: sudden release of accumulated stress along faults

Volcanism

  • Movement of MAGMA from the interior to the surface
  • Creates: volcanoes, lava plateaus, volcanic mountains
  • Intrusive (magma cools BELOW surface → batholiths, dykes, sills) and Extrusive (lava erupts ON SURFACE)

3. Exogenic Processes (External — WEAR Down the Land)

Exogenic processes derive their energy from the SUN (climate) and GRAVITY. They are:

A. Weathering (In-Situ Breakdown)

TypeProcessKey Points
Physical (Mechanical)Rock broken into smaller pieces WITHOUT chemical changeFrost action (freeze-thaw), thermal expansion, pressure release (unloading)
ChemicalRock DECOMPOSED — chemical composition CHANGESSolution (limestone dissolves), oxidation (rust), hydration, carbonation
BiologicalLiving organisms break rocksPlant roots, burrowing animals, lichens (chemical + physical)

B. Mass Wasting (Movement Downslope)

  • Movement of rock and soil DOWNHILL under GRAVITY
  • FAST: landslides, rockfalls, debris flows
  • SLOW: soil creep (millimeters per year — fences, walls tilt over time)
  • Triggered by: heavy rain, earthquakes, slope undercutting

C. Erosion and Deposition

  • EROSION: removal of material by MOBILE AGENTS (running water, wind, glaciers, sea waves)
  • TRANSPORTATION: carrying material away
  • DEPOSITION: dropping material when the agent loses energy
AgentErosional LandformsDepositional Landforms
Running WaterV-shaped valleys, gorges, waterfallsFloodplains, deltas, alluvial fans
WindMushroom rocks, deflation hollowsSand dunes, loess deposits
GlaciersU-shaped valleys, cirques, fjordsMoraines, drumlins, eskers
Sea WavesCliffs, sea arches, stacksBeaches, sand bars, spits

4. The Relationship — Endogenic vs Exogenic

  • Endogenic forces CREATE relief (mountains, plateaus, continents)
  • Exogenic forces REDUCE relief (wearing down, filling in)
  • They work SIMULTANEOUSLY and IN OPPOSITION
  • The landscape we see is the RESULT of this ongoing contest

5. Soil Formation (Pedogenesis)

  • Soil = weathered rock material + organic matter (humus) + water + air
  • Factors: parent material, climate, topography, organisms, TIME
  • Soil is the INTERFACE where the lithosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere MEET

6. Exam Focus

  1. Endogenic vs Exogenic — definitions and examples
  2. Weathering types (physical, chemical, biological)
  3. Mass wasting — what it is, fast vs slow
  4. Agents of erosion and their landforms
  5. Soil formation factors

7. Common Mistakes

  1. Weathering and Erosion are the same — Weathering = breakdown IN PLACE (in-situ). Erosion = removal AND transport by mobile agents. Weathering PREPARES material; erosion MOVES it.
  2. Physical and chemical weathering happen separately — They OFTEN WORK TOGETHER. Physical weathering increases surface area → chemical weathering attacks more surface. They REINFORCE each other.

8. Conclusion

The Earth's surface is a BATTLEGROUND between forces that BUILD (endogenic) and forces that WEAR DOWN (exogenic). The landscapes you see — mountains, valleys, plains, coastlines — are the temporary truce in this endless war.

The Grand Canyon is the Colorado River's autobiography. Every landform is a process, frozen in time.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Endogenic Forces (Internal)
Source: Earth's internal heat → processes: diastrophism (tectonic movements: folding, faulting) + volcanism → BUILD UP landforms
Create mountains, plateaus, rift valleys. Act SLOWLY over millions of years. Himalayan uplift = endogenic.
Exogenic Forces (External)
Source: Solar energy + gravity + water + wind + glaciers → processes: weathering + erosion + transportation + deposition → WEAR DOWN landforms
These forces reduce elevation, creating plains and valleys. They DEGRADE (wear down) what endogenic forces build up.
Weathering (In-Situ Breakdown)
Physical: temperature change (exfoliation, freeze-thaw) + Chemical: water/O₂/CO₂ (hydration, oxidation, carbonation) + Biological: plant roots, organisms
KEY POINT: Weathering involves NO MOVEMENT of material. The rock breaks down WHERE IT IS. Only when material MOVES does erosion begin.
Mass Movement
Creep (slowest) → Flow (earthflow, mudflow) → Slide (rotational/translational) → Fall (rockfall, fastest)
Triggered by: heavy rainfall + steep slopes + weak/saturated rock. Examples: Kedarnath 2013 (debris flow), Joshimath 2023 (landslide)
Erosion Equation
Erosion rate ∝ (Agent velocity × Agent load capacity) / Rock hardness
Faster flowing river, stronger wind, or larger glacier = more erosion. Softer rocks (limestone, sandstone) erode faster than granite.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Confusing weathering with erosion
Weathering = breakdown IN PLACE (no movement). Erosion = removal and TRANSPORT of material by an agent (water, wind, glacier). Weathered material becomes sediment that erosion then transports. Sequence: weathering → erosion → transportation → deposition.
WATCH OUT
Thinking endogenic forces always BUILD and exogenic forces always DESTROY
Endogenic forces primarily build, but can also create depressions (rift valleys, grabens). Exogenic forces primarily erode, but deposition creates new landforms (deltas, beaches, moraines). Both create and modify landforms — the distinction is the ENERGY SOURCE (internal heat vs solar energy).
WATCH OUT
Saying carbonation dissolves all rocks equally
Carbonation (CO₂ + water → carbonic acid) is most effective on LIMESTONE (calcium carbonate). It creates karst topography. Granite and basalt are largely unaffected by carbonation. Rock TYPE determines which chemical weathering dominates.
WATCH OUT
Classifying all mass movements as 'landslides'
Landslide is just ONE type of mass movement (specifically: slide). Creep is so slow it's invisible (years to decades). Flow involves saturated material moving like a liquid. Fall is instantaneous (rock cliff breaking off). Use the correct technical term in board answers.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Classification
Classify each process as endogenic or exogenic and identify the specific type: (a) The Himalayan range being pushed upward at ~5mm per year by Indian Plate collision (b) A river cutting a V-shaped valley in the mountains (c) Magma erupting from a volcano and building a cone (d) Freeze-thaw action breaking apart rock in the Himalayas in winter
Show solution
(a) **Endogenic — Diastrophism (folding)**: The Indian Plate colliding with Eurasian Plate creates compressional forces that fold the crust upward. This is tectonic movement driven by Earth's internal heat. (b) **Exogenic — Fluvial erosion**: River water flowing downslope under gravity cuts into bedrock, creating the V-shaped valley. Energy source: solar energy (drives hydrological cycle that creates rivers) + gravity. (c) **Endogenic — Volcanism**: Magma from Earth's interior erupting through a vent builds a volcanic cone. Energy source: Earth's internal heat from radioactive decay and original accretion. (d) **Exogenic — Physical (Mechanical) Weathering (Freeze-Thaw/Frost Action)**: Water enters rock cracks, freezes, expands by 9%, exerting pressure of ~2,000 kg/cm² — shatters rock. This is in-situ breakdown (no movement), so weathering not erosion.
Q2MEDIUM· Weathering Types
Compare physical (mechanical), chemical, and biological weathering. For each: give the dominant process, the environment where it is most active, and one Indian example.
Show solution
**Physical (Mechanical) Weathering**: - Process: Rock breaks into smaller pieces WITHOUT changing mineral composition. Common types: exfoliation (onion peeling due to temperature change), freeze-thaw (water freezes in cracks, expands, shatters), salt crystallisation (salt deposits grow in rock pores). - Environment: Most active in deserts (extreme temperature fluctuations) and cold mountain regions (freeze-thaw). - Indian example: Rock exfoliation in Rajasthan desert (day temperature 50°C, night 10°C → sheets peel off granite boulders). **Chemical Weathering**: - Process: Rock minerals react with water, oxygen, CO₂, or acids — CHANGING mineral composition. Types: hydration (minerals absorb water, swell, weaken), oxidation (iron minerals rust = red laterite soils), carbonation (CO₂ + water → carbonic acid dissolves limestone). - Environment: Most active in warm, humid tropical regions (high temperature + moisture = fast reactions). - Indian example: Laterisation in Kerala and Western Ghats — iron-rich rock oxidises, forming red laterite soil. Limestone caves in Meghalaya (Mawsmai Cave) = carbonation of limestone. **Biological Weathering**: - Process: Plants and organisms break down rock. Plant roots penetrate cracks, exert wedging pressure; lichens secrete acids that dissolve minerals; burrowing animals loosen soil and expose rock. - Environment: Active in all vegetated areas; most effective in tropical rainforests where root systems are dense. - Indian example: Fig trees (Ficus) growing through granite temple walls in Hampi — root expansion shatters the stone.
Q3HARD· Mass Movements
The Kedarnath disaster of June 2013 involved a combination of heavy rainfall, glacial lake outburst, and debris flow that killed over 5,700 people. Using the concept of mass movements, explain what happened and what geographical factors made the Kedarnath valley particularly vulnerable.
Show solution
**Type of Mass Movement**: The Kedarnath event was primarily a **debris flow** — a fast-moving mixture of rock fragments, soil, and water that moves like a fluid on steep slopes. It was triggered by a combination of: (i) Unusual monsoon rainfall (3× normal in 3 days) (ii) Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) from Chorabari Glacier, releasing ~9 million cubic metres of water (iii) Saturated soil and debris on steep valley walls **Geographical Vulnerability Factors**: 1. **Young, geologically unstable terrain**: The Himalayas are the world's youngest fold mountains (still rising at ~5mm/year). Young rocks are poorly consolidated — fractured, jointed, and easily mobilised by water. 2. **Steep slopes**: The Mandakini valley has slopes exceeding 45°. As slope angle increases, shear stress (driving force for movement) increases while friction (resisting force) decreases. Above a critical angle, any trigger causes movement. 3. **Glacially deposited material**: Moraines (glacial deposits) and glaciofluvial sediments are unconsolidated — they behave like loose gravel when saturated. The valley is filled with such deposits from retreating glaciers. 4. **Permafrost thawing**: Climate change is thawing permafrost, which previously locked slope material in place. Liquid water replaces ice, lubricating rock-soil interfaces and triggering slides. 5. **Human factors compounding natural vulnerability**: Construction of roads, hotels, and pilgrimage infrastructure on slopes removed vegetation (biological weathering protection removed), cut into hillsides (removed toe support), and paved surfaces increased surface runoff. **Lesson**: Geomorphic processes are natural — their consequences become disasters when human settlements occupy vulnerable zones. The Char Dham project now uses slope stability analysis before construction — an application of geomorphic process knowledge.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Endogenic: internal heat → diastrophism (folding/faulting) + volcanism → builds mountains, plateaus, rift valleys
  • Exogenic: solar energy + gravity → weathering + erosion + transport + deposition → levels landforms
  • Weathering = breakdown IN PLACE (no movement). Erosion = removal + transport. Deposition = material settles when energy decreases
  • Physical weathering: freeze-thaw, exfoliation, salt crystallisation. No mineral change. Best in deserts and cold mountains
  • Chemical weathering: hydration, oxidation (laterite), carbonation (limestone/karst). Mineral changes. Best in humid tropics
  • Mass movement types (slowest to fastest): Creep → Earthflow → Mudflow → Slide → Rockfall. Triggered by: rainfall + steep slope + weak rock/soil

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-8 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short Answer (SA)3-51-2Distinguish weathering types; classify endogenic/exogenic; define mass movement types with triggers; compare erosion vs weathering
Long Answer (LA)51Compare all three weathering types with environments and examples; OR explain how endogenic and exogenic forces work together to shape landforms
Prep strategy
  • The endogenic/exogenic distinction underpins ALL subsequent geography chapters — learn it perfectly. Mnemonic: ENDO = internal (endocrine system = internal glands); EXO = external. Endogenic BUILDS; exogenic WEARS DOWN.
  • Three weathering types table: physical (no chemical change, deserts/mountains), chemical (mineral changes, humid tropics), biological (organisms, all vegetation zones). Each needs one Indian example — this is consistently asked.
  • Mass movement classification in order of speed: Creep (invisible, years) → Flow (minutes to hours) → Slide (seconds to minutes) → Fall (instantaneous). Kedarnath 2013 and Joshimath 2023 are current Indian examples that score marks for current affairs integration.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Landslide Hazard Mapping

India's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) uses geomorphic process analysis to map landslide-prone zones. Understanding slope angle, rock type, soil saturation, and vegetation cover (all factors from this chapter) predicts which areas are at risk — used for construction permits and evacuation planning in Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh.

Climate Change and Geomorphology

Climate change is intensifying geomorphic processes: more extreme rainfall triggers more mass movements; glacial retreat increases GLOF risk; permafrost thaw destabilises Arctic and high-altitude slopes. The Joshimath land subsidence (2023) is partly attributed to groundwater depletion + load of construction on glacially deposited material — a direct application of this chapter.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. For 'compare' questions on weathering types: use a 3-column table (type, process, environment, example) — tables score faster than paragraphs for compare/contrast questions in geography
  2. Always include ONE CURRENT INDIAN EXAMPLE for mass movements: Kedarnath 2013 (debris flow), Joshimath 2023 (subsidence/creep), Aizawl landslide 2023 — this shows application of concepts to real events
  3. When asked about 'geomorphic processes': answer = endogenic + exogenic TOGETHER (they work in opposition — endogenic builds, exogenic levels). Never describe only one category when the question says 'processes'

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Study the concept of 'grade' or 'dynamic equilibrium' in geomorphology — a graded stream or slope is in equilibrium between erosion and deposition. Any disturbance (dam, deforestation) shifts the equilibrium and triggers adjustment landforms (incision, aggradation)
  • Explore periglacial geomorphology: the zone at the edge of ice sheets/glaciers where freeze-thaw is the dominant process. Understanding solifluction (saturated soil flowing slowly) explains why Indian Himalayan villages built on gentle slopes are still at mass movement risk

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 BoardHigh
CUET GeographyHigh
UPSC Prelims + Mains (GS-1: Physical Geography)Very High

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Chemical reactions need TWO things: heat (activates reactions) AND moisture (water is the solvent/reactant). Deserts have heat but no moisture — chemical weathering is minimal; physical (mechanical) weathering dominates. Tropical rainforests have both heat AND high rainfall — chemical reactions run continuously at maximum rate. This is why laterite soils (product of intense chemical weathering) form in Kerala and Goa, not in Rajasthan.

A slide involves material moving along a DISTINCT FAILURE PLANE — the block of rock or soil moves as a unit, like a tile sliding off a roof. The internal structure of the material is largely preserved. A flow involves the material BEHAVING LIKE A FLUID — moving as individual particles with no distinct failure plane. This happens when material is fully saturated with water (mudflow, earthflow). The Kedarnath debris was a flow — the material mixed with water and moved like a river of mud.
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Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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