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

  • 1Name 6 factors affecting industrial location with reasoning
  • 2Classify industries as agro-based, mineral-based, forest-based, or animal-based
  • 3Distinguish conventional energy sources (coal/petroleum/hydro) from non-conventional (solar/wind/nuclear)
  • 4State key facts about Africa: Sahara (largest hot desert), Nile (longest river), Kilimanjaro, Great Rift Valley, Savanna wildlife
  • 5Name Australia's unique physical features: Great Dividing Range, Great Barrier Reef, Murray-Darling
  • 6State Australia's unique wildlife: marsupials and monotremes with examples
  • 7State Antarctica's key facts: coldest/driest/windiest, 90% of world's ice, Antarctic Treaty (1959), India's stations
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Why this chapter matters
This ICSE Class 7 Geography chapter covers industries, energy resources, and three continents. Africa's superlatives (Sahara = largest hot desert, Nile = longest river, Kilimanjaro = highest peak, Victoria = largest lake in Africa) appear in every exam. Australia's unique wildlife (marsupials in pouches, monotremes as egg-laying mammals) and the Great Barrier Reef are tested in short-answer questions. Antarctica's key facts (coldest/driest/windiest, Antarctic Treaty 1959, India's stations MAITRI and BHARATI) are reliable MCQ items. The factors affecting industrial location (raw materials, power, labour, transport, market) are a standard 5-mark list question.

Before you start — revise these

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

Industries, Energy & Three Continents

1. Industries

What Is an Industry?

The economic activity of PRODUCING goods — by processing RAW MATERIALS into FINISHED PRODUCTS in FACTORIES.

Factors Affecting Location of Industries

  • Raw materials: Near the source (especially for WEIGHT-LOSING industries like sugar mills)
  • Power: Cheap, reliable supply (aluminium smelting near hydroelectric dams)
  • Labour: SKILLED and UNSKILLED workers available
  • Transport: Roads, railways, ports — for raw materials IN and goods OUT
  • Market: Near consumers (especially for PERISHABLE or HEAVY goods)
  • Capital (money for investment). Government policies (subsidies, tax breaks).

Classification of Industries

By Raw MaterialExamples
Agro-basedCotton textiles, sugar, jute, vegetable oil
Mineral-basedIron and steel, cement, aluminium
Forest-basedPaper, furniture
Animal-basedLeather, wool

Major Industrial Regions of the World

  • North America (NE USA, Great Lakes). Europe (UK, Germany, France, N Italy). East Asia (Japan, China, S Korea). India (Mumbai-Pune, Kolkata, Chennai-Bengaluru).

2. Energy and Power Resources

Conventional Sources

SourceDescription
CoalMost ABUNDANT fossil fuel. Used in thermal power plants, iron and steel. India: 2nd largest producer (after China).
Petroleum (Oil)'Liquid Gold.' Transport, petrochemicals. India imports ~85%. Middle East has ~50% of world reserves.
Natural GasCleaner than coal/oil. CNG (vehicles). PNG (household cooking).
HydropowerRENEWABLE. No fuel cost. Dams. India: 5th largest hydropower capacity.

Non-Conventional (Renewable) Sources

SourceWhy Important
SolarIndia is TROPICAL → HUGE potential. Bhadla Solar Park (Rajasthan) — one of world's largest.
WindTamil Nadu (#1 in India). Gujarat, Maharashtra.
NuclearTarapur (India's first). Uses URANIUM. India has world's LARGEST THORIUM reserves (Kerala monazite sands) — future potential.

3. Africa — The Continent

Physical Features

  • Sahara Desert (NORTH): The world's LARGEST HOT DESERT
  • Great Rift Valley (EAST): A massive geological fault — visible from SPACE
  • Nile River: The world's LONGEST river. Egypt = 'Gift of the Nile'
  • Mt Kilimanjaro (Tanzania): Africa's HIGHEST peak. Snow-capped even at the equator!
  • Lake Victoria: Africa's LARGEST lake. Source of the WHITE NILE

Climate and Vegetation

  • Equatorial (centre): HOT and WET year-round. DENSE RAINFORESTS (Congo Basin).
  • Savanna (either side of rainforest): Grasslands with scattered trees. Home to the GREATEST WILDLIFE concentration on Earth (Serengeti — lions, elephants, giraffes, zebras, wildebeest).
  • Desert (Sahara in north, Kalahari in south).

Key Issues

  • RICH in resources (diamonds, gold, oil, minerals). Many countries are POOR in development.
  • COLONIALISM left borders that did not match ethnic/cultural divisions. The effects are still felt.

4. Australia — The Island Continent

Physical Features

  • The WORLD'S SMALLEST CONTINENT and LARGEST ISLAND
  • Great Dividing Range (EAST). Central Lowlands. Western Plateau.
  • Great Barrier Reef (NE coast): The world's LARGEST CORAL REEF. Visible from SPACE. Home to extraordinary marine biodiversity. Threatened by coral bleaching (climate change).
  • Murray-Darling River System: Australia's most important rivers

Climate

Much of Australia is ARID (DESERT or semi-desert). The OUTBACK: vast, sparsely populated interior. Most Australians live on the COAST — especially the southeast (Sydney, Melbourne).

Unique Wildlife (Because Australia Is Isolated)

  • MARSUPIALS: Kangaroo, Koala, Wallaby, Wombat. Raise young in POUCHES.
  • MONOTREMES (egg-laying mammals): Platypus, Echidna.
  • 'Australia's animals evolved in ISOLATION for millions of years. They exist NOWHERE ELSE on Earth.'

5. Antarctica — The White Continent

Key Facts

  • The COLDEST, DRIEST, WINDIEST, HIGHEST (average elevation) continent
  • 90% of the world's ICE is here. If it melted: sea levels would rise ~60 metres.
  • NO permanent human population. Only SCIENTISTS at research stations (India: MAITRI and BHARATI).

Why Antarctica Matters

  • It is the 'WORLD'S THERMOSTAT' — its ice reflects sunlight, keeping Earth cool.
  • It is a TIME CAPSULE — ice cores preserve 800,000 years of climate history.
  • It is PROTECTED by the Antarctic Treaty (1959) : NO mining. NO military activity. Only PEACEFUL SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH.

Threats

  • CLIMATE CHANGE: The Antarctic Peninsula is warming FASTER than almost anywhere on Earth. Ice shelves are BREAKING OFF. Sea levels are RISING.

Key formulas & results

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

Industries, Energy, Africa, Australia, and Antarctica
INDUSTRIES: DEFINITION: processing raw materials into finished products in factories. 6 FACTORS FOR LOCATION: (1) Raw materials (near source for weight-losing industries). (2) Power (cheap, reliable). (3) Labour (skilled and unskilled). (4) Transport (roads, railways, ports). (5) Market (near consumers — especially perishable goods). (6) Capital + Government policies. TYPES BY RAW MATERIAL: Agro-based (cotton textiles, sugar, jute). Mineral-based (iron + steel, cement, aluminium). Forest-based (paper, furniture). Animal-based (leather, wool). MAJOR INDUSTRIAL REGIONS: NE USA/Great Lakes. Europe (UK, Germany). East Asia (Japan, China, S Korea). India (Mumbai-Pune, Kolkata, Chennai-Bengaluru). ENERGY: CONVENTIONAL: Coal (most abundant fossil fuel, thermal power, India = 2nd largest producer after China). Petroleum (transport + petrochemicals, India imports ~85%). Natural Gas (CNG, PNG). Hydropower (renewable, dams, India = 5th largest capacity). NON-CONVENTIONAL (RENEWABLE): Solar (Bhadla Solar Park, Rajasthan = one of world's largest). Wind (Tamil Nadu #1 in India; Gujarat, Maharashtra). Nuclear (Tarapur = India's first nuclear plant; India has world's LARGEST THORIUM reserves in Kerala monazite sands). AFRICA: 2nd largest continent. PHYSICAL FEATURES: SAHARA DESERT (N) = world's LARGEST HOT DESERT. GREAT RIFT VALLEY (E) = massive geological fault, visible from space. NILE RIVER = world's LONGEST river. Egypt = 'Gift of the Nile'. MT KILIMANJARO (Tanzania) = Africa's HIGHEST peak (snow-capped at the equator). LAKE VICTORIA = Africa's LARGEST lake, source of the WHITE NILE. CLIMATE ZONES: Equatorial (Congo Basin — hot, wet, dense rainforest). Savanna (grasslands, greatest wildlife concentration: Serengeti — lions, elephants, giraffes, zebras). Desert (Sahara in N, Kalahari in S). ISSUES: Rich in resources (diamonds, gold, oil) but poor in development. Colonial legacy of arbitrary borders. AUSTRALIA: WORLD'S SMALLEST CONTINENT and LARGEST ISLAND. PHYSICAL: Great Dividing Range (E). Central Lowlands. Western Plateau. GREAT BARRIER REEF (NE coast) = world's LARGEST CORAL REEF. Visible from space. Threatened by climate change (coral bleaching). MURRAY-DARLING = most important rivers. CLIMATE: mostly ARID. OUTBACK = vast sparsely populated interior. Most Australians live on SE coast (Sydney, Melbourne). UNIQUE WILDLIFE (evolved in ISOLATION): MARSUPIALS (raise young in POUCHES): Kangaroo, Koala, Wallaby, Wombat. MONOTREMES (EGG-LAYING MAMMALS): Platypus, Echidna. ANTARCTICA: COLDEST (-89.2°C record), DRIEST, WINDIEST, HIGHEST AVERAGE ELEVATION continent. 90% of world's ICE. If all melted: sea levels rise ~60 metres. NO permanent human population — only scientists. India's stations: MAITRI and BHARATI. PROTECTED by ANTARCTIC TREATY (1959): NO mining, NO military, only peaceful scientific research. 'World's THERMOSTAT' — reflects sunlight. ICE CORES = 800,000 years of climate history. CLIMATE THREAT: Antarctic Peninsula warming fastest. Ice shelves breaking off.
ICSE CLASS 7 GEOGRAPHY KEY FACTS: (1) Nile = LONGEST river in the world (6,650 km). Amazon = LARGEST by VOLUME. (2) Sahara = LARGEST HOT DESERT. Antarctica = LARGEST COLD DESERT (receives almost no precipitation). (3) Australia = SMALLEST CONTINENT but also LARGEST ISLAND (it's both). (4) MONOTREMES (platypus + echidna) are MAMMALS that lay EGGS — they are NOT reptiles. They also produce milk (mammary glands). (5) GREAT BARRIER REEF: largest coral reef. Made of living coral polyps. Climate change causes 'coral bleaching' (corals expel their algae and turn white). (6) India's ANTARCTIC STATIONS: MAITRI (operational) and BHARATI (operational). 'Dakshin Gangotri' was India's first station (now used as supply base).
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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
Saying the Amazon is the world's longest river, or that koalas are marsupials because they are bears
TWO CORRECTIONS: (1) WORLD'S LONGEST RIVER: NILE (Africa) = approximately 6,650 km. The Amazon (South America) is the largest by WATER VOLUME (flow rate) and drainage basin size, but NOT the longest. The Nile is narrower but longer. 'Longest = Nile. Largest volume = Amazon.' (2) KOALAS: Koalas are called 'koala bears' in common language but they are NOT bears. They are MARSUPIALS — they give birth to tiny joeys and raise them in a POUCH. They are more closely related to wombats than to bears. All Australian native mammals (except monotremes) are marsupials — they evolved in ISOLATION before Australia separated from other continents.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· africa-australia-antarctica-facts
Fill in the blanks: (a) The world's largest hot desert is ___. (b) Africa's highest mountain is ___. (c) The world's longest river is ___. (d) Australia's world's largest coral reef is ___. (e) Mammals that lay eggs are called ___. Give two examples. (f) India has two research stations in Antarctica named ___ and ___. (g) The treaty that protects Antarctica from mining is the ___ (year).
Show solution
(a) SAHARA DESERT (Africa, approximately 9.2 million km²). (b) MT KILIMANJARO (Tanzania, 5,895 m) — snow-capped despite being near the Equator. (c) NILE RIVER (Africa, ~6,650 km). Note: Amazon is largest by volume, but Nile is longest. (d) GREAT BARRIER REEF (NE coast of Australia, over 2,300 km long, visible from space, made of living coral polyps — threatened by coral bleaching due to climate change). (e) MONOTREMES. Examples: PLATYPUS (has a duck-like bill, webbed feet, lays eggs, produces milk) and ECHIDNA (spiny, long snout, lays eggs). Both are found in Australia. (f) India's Antarctic research stations: MAITRI and BHARATI. (India's first station was Dakshin Gangotri, now used as a supply base.) (g) ANTARCTIC TREATY (1959, signed in Washington DC). It prohibits mining, military activity, and nuclear tests. Only peaceful scientific research is permitted.

ICSE marks blueprint

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

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Last reviewed on 28 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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