Fees 101
Fees 101
Landforms Timeline
and Life and Sources
Oceans and of History
Continents
India, That
Is Bharat
THEME A
India and the THEME B
Locating World – Land
Places on the Tapestry
and the of the Past
Earth The Beginnings of
People
Indian Civilisation
Social
The Value India’s
of Work
THEME E Science THEME C
Cultural
Economic Our Cultural
Roots
Life Around Heritage and
Us Knowledge
Traditions
Theme D
Economic Unity in
Governance
Activities and Diversity,
Around Us Democracy or ‘Many in
the One’ Introduction – Why Social Science?
Local Government
in Rural Areas
Governance
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CHAPTER
Locating Places
on the Earth
The globe of the Earth stands in space, made up of water,
earth, fire and air and is spherical. ... It is surrounded by
all creatures, terrestrial as well as aquatic.
— Āryabhaṭa (about 500 CE)
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LET’S EXPLORE
Æ Draw a simple map of a school’s playground. Let us
assume it is a rectangle, 40 m in length and 30 m in width.
Draw it precisely with your ruler on a scale of 1 cm = 10 m.
Æ Now measure the diagonal of the rectangle. How many
centimetres do you get? Using the scale, calculate the real
length of the playground’s diagonal, in metres.
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page 12.
LET’S EXPLORE
Draw a rough map of your locality or your village, including
your home, school and a few other important landmarks. Show
the cardinal directions and use a few of the symbols shown in
Fig. 1.2 on page 12 to mark some important features.
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Boundary: international,
state, district
Settlement, graveyard
Trees, grass
have just three or four large pieces of the skin; then try and
flatten them on a table — you will see that you cannot do it
without tearing them at the edges.
Now, consider a globe, which is a sphere on which a map
is drawn. This may be a map of the Earth, the Moon, the
planet Mars, the stars and constellations in the sky, etc.
The physical object, like the one shown in the drawing on
the next page, is a sphere that is generally made of metal,
12 plastic or cardboard.
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a) Understanding coordinates
Imagine a big market in a city or town, with
neat rows of shops, all the same size. You
want to meet a friend at a stationery shop
inside the market. But your friend does
not know where the shop is. So you would give directions
like, “Meet me at 6 pm at the 7th shop in the 5th row from
the entrance.” This will allow your friend to precisely
determine your location.
Now, consider a chessboard.
To record moves by advanced
players, letters are placed
alongside the main pieces
(from ‘a’ to ‘h’, see the image)
and numbers (from 1 to 8) in
between the two sides. This
simple system allows players
to mark each square and
record every move. Here, the
white side has just opened the
1 – Locating Places on the Earth
LET’S EXPLORE
Using the same terms, write down your move if you play black
and respond with the same move. 13
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b) Latitudes
Let us return to the globe. It is easy to identify the North
Pole and the South Pole on it. Rotate the globe; while it
rotates, the fixed points at the top and bottom are the two
poles. Halfway between them is the Equator; note the circle
marking it (see Fig. 1.3).
Imagine that you stand on the Equator and travel towards
one of the poles; your distance from the Equator increases.
Latitude measures this distance from the Equator. At any
point of this travel, you can draw an imaginary line that
runs east and west, parallel to the Equator. Such a line is
called a parallel of latitude and it draws a circle around
the Earth. Again, it is easy to note on the globe that the
largest circle is the Equator, while the circles marked by the
parallels of latitude grow smaller as we move northward or
southward (Fig. 1.3).
Latitudes are expressed in degrees; by convention, the
India and the World: Land and the People
the two poles are 90° North and 90° South respectively; this
is noted 90°N and 90°S.
There is a connection between latitude and climate. Around
the Equator, the climate is generally hot (it is also called
‘torrid’). As you travel away from the Equator towards one
of the two poles (in other words, as your latitude increases),
the climate becomes more moderate (or ‘temperate’). And
closer to the North or South Pole, the climate grows colder
14 (or ‘frigid’). You will learn in Science why this is so, and
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c) Longitudes
Imagine now that you travel from the North Pole to the South
Pole by the shortest possible line. Observe the globe: you
will see that instead of passing through Europe and Africa,
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LET’S EXPLORE
If the globe or atlas in your class has well-marked latitudes
and longitudes, try to note down approximate values for the
latitude and longitude of (1) Mumbai, (2) Kolkata, (3) Singapore,
(4) Paris.
Greenwich
Meridian
Western Northern
Hemisphere Hemisphere
Equ
ator
Eastern
Hemisphere
Southern
Hemisphere
Fig. 1.4. This sketch shows how the Prime Meridian divides the Earth into
the Western and Eastern Hemispheres, while the Equator divides it into the
Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
was called madhya rekhā (or ‘middle line’) and passed through
the city of Ujjayinī (today Ujjain), which was a reputed centre
for astronomy over many centuries. Varāhamihira, a famous
astronomer, lived and worked there some 1,500 years ago.
Indian astronomers were aware of concepts of latitude and
longitude, including the need for a zero or prime meridian.
The Ujjayinī meridian became a reference for calculations in
all Indian astronomical texts.
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75.8°E
Kurukṣhetra
Mālavangara / Nagar
Mumbai
Chennai
India and the World: Land and the People
Bengaluru
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Ancient city
Modern city
Kumārī / Kanyakumari
Fig. 1.5. The Ujjayinī prime meridian used in ancient Indian astronomy. Cities
marked with a circle are mentioned in astronomical texts as being on this
meridian (the modern name is given after the oblique bar).
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Fig. 1.6. This map, published by the Survey of India, shows the country’s
outline along with a few parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude.
India’s latitudes extend approximately from to 8°N to 37°N, and longitudes
approximately from 68°E to 97°E. (The two colours have been added.)
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9 AM 10 AM 11 AM 12 PM 1 PM 2 PM 3 PM
15°
India and the World: Land and the People
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Fig. 1.7. This graph shows longitudes at the bottom and the local time at the
top, with reference to the Prime Meridian at 0°. Each colour is a zone of 15°
centred on a meridian.
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LET’S EXPLORE
Return to the two friends sitting in Gujarat and Assam. Use
this example to explain the difference between local time and
standard time.
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1 2
6 7
8 9
10 11
Across Down
1. Lets you squeeze a huge 2. A measure of the distance
area into your map from the Prime Meridian
4. A convenient sphere 3. These two together allow
5. The longest parallel of us to locate a place
1 – Locating Places on the Earth
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