Shaping of the Earth's Surface — RBSE Class 9 (Social Science · NCF)
The ground beneath your feet feels solid and permanent — yet the Himalayas are still rising, the Deccan is an ancient worn-down plateau, and continents drift a few centimetres each year. The Earth's surface is a slow, endless sculpture, carved by forces from deep inside the planet and from the wind, water and ice on top. This theme is about reading that sculpture.
1. The interior of the Earth
The Earth is made of three main layers:
- Crust — the thin, solid outermost layer w e live on (thicker under continents, thinner under oceans). Made mainly of rocks.
- Mantle — the thick middle layer of hot, semi-molten rock (magma) beneath the crust; its slow currents drive the movement of the surface.
- Core — the innermost layer, mostly iron and nickel; the outer core is liquid, the inner core solid and extremely hot. The core is responsible for the Earth's magnetic field.
The crust is not one continuous shell — it is broken into large slabs called plates.
2. Plate tectonics — the moving jigsaw
The theory of plate tectonics says the Earth's outer shell (the crust plus the uppermost mantle, the lithosphere) is divided into several huge tectonic plates that float on the semi-molten mantle and move very slowly (a few cm per year), carried by currents in the mantle.
At plate boundaries, three things can happen:
- Plates move apart (diverging) — magma rises to fill the gap, forming new crust (mid-ocean ridges).
- Plates collide (converging) — they crumple upward into fold mountains (the Himalayas, from the Indian and Eurasian plates), or one plate slides under another.
- Plates slide past each other — causing earthquakes.
Plate movement explains earthquakes, volcanoes, and the drift of continents (long ago all land was joined in one supercontinent that broke apart and drifted).
3. The two forces that shape the surface
Landforms are the result of a constant tug-of-war between two kinds of forces.
Endogenic (internal) forces — the builders
Forces originating inside the Earth (driven by heat and plate movement). They build up the surface:
- slow (diastrophic) — the gradual folding and faulting that raises mountains and plateaus;
- sudden — earthquakes (shaking from a sudden release of energy) and volcanoes (molten rock erupting to the surface).
Exogenic (external) forces — the sculptors
Forces acting on the surface, powered by the Sun and gravity. They wear down and level the land through:
- Weathering — the breaking down of rocks in place (by temperature changes, water, plants, chemicals).
- Erosion — the wearing away and removal of rock and soil by running water (rivers), wind, glaciers and sea waves.
- Deposition — the dropping of this eroded material elsewhere, building new landforms (deltas, sand dunes, floodplains).
Endogenic forces raise the land; exogenic forces lower and reshape it. The landscape you see is the balance between the two at any moment.
4. How major landforms are made
- Mountains — mostly fold mountains, formed where plates collide and crumple the crust upward (young, high Himalayas). Some are volcanic (built of erupted lava) or block mountains (raised between faults).
- Plateaus — raised, flat-topped tablelands; some are old, worn-down land (the Deccan Plateau), some formed by lava flows. They are often rich in minerals.
- Plains — large, flat, low areas, usually built by rivers depositing silt (the fertile Northern Plains) — the most densely settled landforms because farming is easy.
The three types of rocks are part of this cycle: igneous (cooled magma), sedimentary (compacted deposits, often with fossils) and metamorphic (rocks changed by heat and pressure) — and they slowly transform into one another over vast time (the rock cycle).
5. Closing thought
The Earth's surface is never finished. Endogenic forces from the hot interior — through drifting plates, earthquakes and volcanoes — keep building mountains and plateaus, while exogenic forces — weathering, erosion and deposition by water, wind and ice — patiently wear them down and reshape them into plains, valleys and deltas. Every landform is a snapshot of this ongoing contest.
For the RBSE board (new NCF Class 9 SST), master the three layers of the Earth, the theory of plate tectonics and what happens at plate boundaries, the endogenic vs exogenic forces (with weathering/erosion/deposition), and how mountains, plateaus and plains form. Diagrams of the Earth's interior and plate boundaries are reliable marks.
