Representation of Geographical Features — Maps, Globes, and Grids

Introduction — Why Maps Matter

A MAP is a DRAWING of the Earth's surface (or part of it) on a flat surface. Maps are one of the MOST IMPORTANT tools in geography. They allow us to SEE the world — without travelling. They show us WHERE things are, HOW they are arranged, and HOW to GET from one place to another.

'The Earth is ROUND. Paper is FLAT. The challenge of map-making is to REPRESENT a three-dimensional sphere on a two-dimensional surface WITHOUT too much distortion.'

Globe vs. Map

FeatureGlobeMap
ShapeSPHERICAL (like the Earth)FLAT
AccuracyAccurate shape, size, and distanceSOME DISTORTION (especially near poles)
PortabilityDIFFICULT to carryEASY to carry, fold, and store
ViewCan see ONLY ONE HALF at a timeCan see the ENTIRE world or focus on ONE region
DetailLimited detail (small scale)Can show GREAT detail (large scale)

Essential Elements of a Map

Every GOOD map must have FIVE essential elements:

1. Title

'What does this map SHOW? The title tells you.' Examples: 'Physical Map of India,' 'Rainfall Distribution in India.'

2. Direction

  • NORTH is usually at the TOP of the map
  • A COMPASS ROSE (or North arrow) shows directions
  • CARDINAL directions: North (N), South (S), East (E), West (W)
  • INTERMEDIATE directions: Northeast (NE), Northwest (NW), Southeast (SE), Southwest (SW)

3. Scale

SCALE is the RATIO between distance on the map and actual distance on the ground.

Types of Scale:

TypeExampleMeaning
Statement Scale'1 cm = 1 km'1 cm on map = 1 km on ground
Representative Fraction (RF)1:100,0001 unit on map = 100,000 same units on ground
Linear Scale (Bar Scale)A LINE divided into segmentsVISUAL representation

Large Scale vs. Small Scale:

  • Large Scale: Shows SMALL area with GREAT detail (e.g., a city map — 1:10,000)
  • Small Scale: Shows LARGE area with LESS detail (e.g., world map — 1:100,000,000)

'Large scale = SMALL area, BIG detail. Small scale = BIG area, LITTLE detail. Remember: large scale shows MORE detail.'

4. Symbols (Legend / Key)

Maps use SYMBOLS to represent real-world features. The LEGEND or KEY explains what each symbol means.

ColourRepresents
BlueWater bodies (oceans, rivers, lakes)
GreenForests, plains, lowlands
Yellow/BrownHighlands, plateaus, mountains
WhiteSnow, ice caps
Red/BlackRoads, cities, boundaries

5. Grid — Latitudes and Longitudes

Together, latitudes and longitudes form a GRID that gives EVERY point on Earth a UNIQUE ADDRESS.

Latitudes (Parallels)

Latitudes are HORIZONTAL lines running EAST-WEST. They are called PARALLELS because they are PARALLEL to each other — they never meet.

Important LatitudeDegreesSignificance
EquatorDivides Earth into NORTHERN and SOUTHERN hemispheres. LONGEST latitude.
Tropic of Cancer23½° NPasses through INDIA. Northernmost point where sun is DIRECTLY overhead.
Tropic of Capricorn23½° SSouthernmost point where sun is DIRECTLY overhead.
Arctic Circle66½° NArea of MIDNIGHT SUN (north)
Antarctic Circle66½° SArea of MIDNIGHT SUN (south)

Longitudes (Meridians)

Longitudes are VERTICAL lines running NORTH-SOUTH from pole to pole. They are called MERIDIANS. All meridians are EQUAL in length.

  • Prime Meridian: 0° longitude. PASSES through GREENWICH, ENGLAND (near London)
  • Together, there are 360 degrees of longitude (180° East and 180° West)
  • The 180° meridian is the INTERNATIONAL DATE LINE

Uses of Latitudes and Longitudes

  • To LOCATE any place precisely on Earth
  • To calculate TIME (every 15° longitude = 1 hour difference)
  • To understand CLIMATE (latitudes determine temperature zones)
  • For NAVIGATION (ships and planes use the grid)

Types of Maps

TypeWhat It ShowsExample
Physical MapNatural features — mountains, rivers, plainsPhysical map of India
Political MapHuman boundaries — countries, states, citiesPolitical map of Europe
Thematic MapONE specific theme — rainfall, population, cropsRainfall map of India

Sketch, Plan, and Map

TermMeaning
SketchA ROUGH drawing — no scale. Just a general idea.
PlanA LARGE-SCALE drawing of a SMALL area (a room, a building, a neighbourhood). Very DETAILED.
MapA SCALE drawing of the Earth's surface or part of it.

ICSE Exam Focus

Question TypeMarksLikely Topics
Short Answer2List and explain the 5 essential elements of a map
Short Answer2Distinguish a globe and a map
Short Answer2What are latitudes and longitudes?
Short Answer2Name the 5 important latitudes with degrees
MCQ1Types of maps / scale / directions

Common Mistakes in ICSE Exams

  1. Confusing LATITUDE and LONGITUDE — Latitudes = HORIZONTAL (parallel). Longitudes = VERTICAL (meet at poles).
  2. Forgetting the PRIME MERIDIAN at Greenwich — 0° longitude passes through GREENWICH, ENGLAND. Not Paris, not Delhi.
  3. Confusing LARGE SCALE and SMALL SCALE — Large scale = SMALL area, MORE detail. Small scale = LARGE area, LESS detail.
  4. Saying the Equator is the 'hottest' place — Actually, the TROPICS receive the most direct sunlight. But the equator is HUMID.

Self-Test: 5 Questions

Q1. What are the FIVE essential elements of a map? Explain each briefly. A1. (1) TITLE — tells what the map shows. (2) DIRECTION — usually North at the top, shown by a compass rose. (3) SCALE — the ratio between map distance and ground distance. (4) SYMBOLS/LEGEND — explains what the symbols on the map mean. (5) GRID — latitudes and longitudes to locate places.

Q2. What are the ADVANTAGES of a MAP over a GLOBE? A2. Maps have several advantages over globes: (1) PORTABILITY — maps can be folded and carried easily. (2) DETAIL — maps can show great detail of small areas. (3) FLEXIBILITY — maps can show the WHOLE world or just a neighbourhood. (4) SPECIALISATION — maps can focus on ONE theme (rainfall, population).

Q3. What are LATITUDES? Name the FIVE IMPORTANT LATITUDES with their degrees. A3. Latitudes are HORIZONTAL lines on the Earth's surface (parallels). They run east-west. The five important latitudes are: (1) EQUATOR — 0°. (2) TROPIC OF CANCER — 23½° N (passes through India). (3) TROPIC OF CAPRICORN — 23½° S. (4) ARCTIC CIRCLE — 66½° N. (5) ANTARCTIC CIRCLE — 66½° S.

Q4. Distinguish LARGE SCALE and SMALL SCALE maps. A4. LARGE SCALE maps: show a SMALL area with GREAT detail (e.g., a city map at 1:10,000). SMALL SCALE maps: show a LARGE area with LESS detail (e.g., a world map at 1:100,000,000). Large scale = MORE detail. Small scale = LESS detail.

Q5. What is the GRID system? Why is it important? A5. The grid system is the NETWORK of latitudes and longitudes on the Earth's surface. Every place on Earth has a UNIQUE intersection of latitude and longitude — like a UNIQUE ADDRESS. It is important for: (1) LOCATION — finding any place precisely. (2) NAVIGATION — guiding ships and planes. (3) TIME — calculating time zones (15° = 1 hour). (4) CLIMATE — understanding temperature zones.

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