Topographical Maps, Atmosphere, Weather & Weathering

1. Representation of Geographical Features (Topographical Maps)

What Is a Topographical Map?

A DETAILED map showing natural features (hills, rivers, forests) and human-made features (roads, railways, settlements, canals) — using CONVENTIONAL SYMBOLS and COLOURS.

Scale

Three ways to show scale:

  • Statement Scale: 1 cm = 1 km
  • Representative Fraction (RF) : 1:100,000
  • Linear/Graphic Scale: A drawn line divided into units

Colours on Topo Maps

ColourWhat It Represents
BlueWater — rivers, lakes, canals
GreenForests and vegetation
BrownContour lines
RedRoads, settlements, grid lines
YellowCultivated land
BlackRailway lines, boundaries, names

Contour Lines

Lines joining points of EQUAL HEIGHT above sea level.

  • Closely spaced contours: STEEP slope
  • Widely spaced contours: GENTLE slope
  • Concentric, closed contours: HILL or MOUNTAIN
  • Concentric contours with INWARD ticks: DEPRESSION

2. The Atmosphere

Layers of the Atmosphere (From Earth Upward)

LayerKey Feature
Troposphere (0–12 km)WHERE WEATHER HAPPENS. Temperature DECREASES with height.
Stratosphere (12–50 km)Contains OZONE LAYER (absorbs harmful UV radiation). Temperature INCREASES.
Mesosphere (50–80 km)Meteors BURN UP here. Coldest layer.
Thermosphere (80–600 km)AURORA. Radio waves reflected.

Atmospheric Pressure

The WEIGHT of air pressing down on the Earth. Measured by a BAROMETER.

  • HIGH pressure: Sinking air. Clear skies.
  • LOW pressure: Rising air. Clouds, rain.

3. Weather and Climate

WeatherClimate
TimeSHORT-TERM (hour to hour, day to day)LONG-TERM (average of 30+ years)
What it tellsWhat's happening RIGHT NOW

Elements of Weather

  • Temperature (thermometer — max/min)
  • Humidity (wet/dry bulb thermometer, hygrometer)
  • Rainfall (rain gauge)
  • Wind (anemometer — speed; wind vane — direction)
  • Atmospheric pressure (barometer)

Types of Rainfall

TypeMechanism
ConvectionalSun heats surface → air rises → cools → condensation → heavy SHOWERS. Equatorial regions.
Orographic (Relief)Moist air FORCED UP a mountain → cools → rains on WINDWARD side. Leeward side = DRY (Rain Shadow).
Cyclonic (Frontal)Warm air RISES over cold air along a FRONT. Widespread, long-duration. Temperate regions.

4. Weathering and Soil Formation

What Is Weathering?

The BREAKING DOWN of rocks IN SITU (in place — without movement). 'Weathering PREPARES the material. Erosion MOVES IT.'

Types of Weathering

TypeMechanismExamples
Physical (Mechanical)Rocks break WITHOUT chemical changeFrost action (freeze-thaw), heating/cooling, exfoliation (peeling layers)
ChemicalRocks DECOMPOSE — chemical composition CHANGESOxidation (rusting), carbonation (limestone dissolved by CO₂ in rainwater), hydration
BiologicalLiving organisms break rocksTree roots. Lichens and mosses (produce acids). Burrowing animals.

Soil Formation (Pedogenesis)

Soil = WEATHERED ROCK + ORGANIC MATTER (humus) + WATER + AIR. Factors: parent rock, climate, vegetation, topography, TIME. Soil takes HUNDREDS of years to form a few centimetres — it is a PRECIOUS, renewable-but-slow resource.

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