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

  • 1Define a resource and explain that resources are a function of human activity
  • 2Classify resources on the basis of origin, exhaustibility, ownership and status of development
  • 3Explain the need for resource planning and the meaning of sustainable development (Rio 1992, Agenda 21)
  • 4Describe India's land-use pattern, causes of land degradation and conservation measures
  • 5Identify the major soil types of India with a distinguishing feature and a crop for each, and explain soil erosion and its control
💡
Why this chapter matters
The opening Geography chapter sets the vocabulary (resource types, sustainable development) used through the rest of the book, and the soil-types question is one of the most predictable scorers in the RBSE board. Rajasthan-specific examples (arid soil, solar/wind potential, Chambal ravines) make it especially relevant for state students.

Before you start — revise these

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

Resources and Development — RBSE Class 10 (Geography)

A lump of iron ore in the ground is just rock — until someone learns to smelt it, and a railway exists to carry it, and a market wants steel. Only then does it become a resource. The lesson hiding in that sentence is the heart of this chapter: resources are not given by nature alone; they are made useful by human beings — and can just as easily be wasted.


1. What is a resource?

Everything available in our environment that can be used to satisfy our needs is a resource, provided it is technologically accessible, economically feasible and culturally acceptable.

Resources are a function of human activity — humans transform material in the environment into resources and use them. The interactive relationship is between nature, technology and institutions.


2. Classifying resources

BasisTypes
OriginBiotic (from living things — plants, animals, fish) · Abiotic (non-living — rocks, metals)
ExhaustibilityRenewable (replenished: solar, water, forests) · Non-renewable (take millions of years to form: coal, petroleum)
OwnershipIndividual · Community · National · International
Status of developmentPotential (exists but not yet used — e.g. solar/wind in Rajasthan & Gujarat) · Developed · Stock (material we lack the technology to use, e.g. hydrogen as fuel) · Reserves (subset of stock usable with present technology, e.g. river water for hydel power)

Renewable further splits into continuous/flow (solar, wind) and biological (forests, wildlife). The distinction between stock and reserve is a favourite exam point: stock = can't use yet (technology gap); reserve = could be used but kept for the future.


3. Why resources need planning

Indiscriminate use of resources has created three big problems:

  1. Depletion of resources to satisfy the greed of a few.
  2. Accumulation of resources in a few hands, dividing society into haves and have-nots.
  3. Global ecological crises — global warming, ozone-layer depletion, pollution, land degradation.

Hence resource planning is essential. In India it involves: (i) identifying and inventorying resources across regions; (ii) building a planning structure with technology, skill and institutions; and (iii) matching resource-development plans with national development plans.

Resources are unevenly distributed — Rajasthan has plenty of solar and wind energy but lacks water; Jharkhand is rich in minerals but lacks industry; Ladakh has a rich cultural heritage but is short of water and infrastructure. Planning must account for this.


4. Resource conservation and sustainable development

Conservation was urged early — Gandhiji said, "There is enough for everybody's need but not for anybody's greed." He blamed exploitative modern technology and greedy people.

Sustainable development = development that takes place without damaging the environment, and meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

The Rio Earth Summit (1992) at Rio de Janeiro produced Agenda 21 — a global action plan for sustainable development in the 21st century, urging local bodies to draw up their own local Agenda 21.


5. Land and soil resources

Land is a finite, vital resource. India's land-use: about 43% plains (agriculture, industry), 30% mountains (rivers, tourism), 27% plateaus (minerals, fossil fuels). Land must be used as planned — land degradation comes from deforestation, overgrazing, mining, over-irrigation (which causes waterlogging and salinity) and industrial effluents. Conservation methods: afforestation, proper grazing management, planting shelter belts, control of mining and proper discharge of industrial waste.

Major soil types of India

  • Alluvial soil — most widespread and fertile; deposited by rivers (the northern plains). Rich in potash, phosphoric acid and lime; ideal for sugarcane, wheat, rice. Khadar (new) is more fertile than bangar (old).
  • Black soil (regur) — the cotton soil of the Deccan trap (Maharashtra, parts of Gujarat, MP). Made of fine clay, holds moisture, develops deep cracks in summer (self-ploughing). Ideal for cotton.
  • Red and yellow soil — over crystalline rocks in low-rainfall areas (eastern/southern Deccan); reddish from iron, yellow when hydrated.
  • Laterite soil — formed by intense leaching in high-temperature, heavy-rainfall regions; good for tea, coffee, cashew after manuring.
  • Arid soil — sandy, saline, low in humus (Rajasthan); needs irrigation to be made fertile.
  • Forest soil — in hilly, forested areas; varies with slope.

Soil erosion (removal of topsoil by wind/water) forms gullies (badland, e.g. Chambal ravines) and sheet erosion. Conservation: contour ploughing, terrace farming, strip cropping and planting shelter belts.


6. Closing thought

Two ideas anchor this chapter. First, a resource is co-created by nature, technology and human institutions — which means a "stock" today (hydrogen fuel, solar in a sun-rich state) can become a "reserve" and then a "developed resource" tomorrow. Second, because resources are finite and unevenly shared, planning and sustainable use are not optional luxuries but survival necessities — captured by Gandhiji's line about need versus greed and by Agenda 21.

For the RBSE board, lock in the classification table (especially stock vs reserve, potential vs developed) and the major soil types with one defining feature and crop each — these are the reliable scorers.

Key formulas & results

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

Resource
Anything in the environment usable to meet needs (tech + economic + cultural feasibility)
A function of human activity.
Exhaustibility classes
Renewable (solar, water, forests) vs Non-renewable (coal, petroleum)
Renewable = flow/continuous or biological.
Stock vs Reserve
Stock = can't use yet (no technology); Reserve = usable subset for the future
Common exam distinction.
Sustainable development
Meet present needs without compromising future generations
Rio Summit 1992 → Agenda 21.
Major soils
Alluvial, Black (regur), Red-Yellow, Laterite, Arid, Forest
Each with a feature + crop.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Confusing stock and reserve
STOCK = the material exists but we lack the technology to use it (e.g. hydrogen fuel). RESERVE = a part of the stock we CAN use with current technology but keep for future needs (e.g. river water for hydel power).
WATCH OUT
Calling all renewable resources 'inexhaustible'
Renewable resources can still be over-used. Forests and water are renewable but can be degraded/depleted if exploited faster than they regenerate.
WATCH OUT
Mixing up black and alluvial soil features
Black (regur) soil holds moisture, cracks in summer and suits cotton — found on the Deccan trap. Alluvial soil is river-deposited, most fertile and widespread — found in the northern plains.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting that resources are unevenly distributed
Rajasthan has solar/wind potential but lacks water; Jharkhand has minerals but little industry. Distribution is uneven, which is why planning is needed.
WATCH OUT
Confusing khadar and bangar
Khadar is the NEW, more fertile alluvium near rivers; bangar is the OLDER alluvium with more kankar (calcareous) nodules and less fertility.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· Definition
Give one example each of a renewable and a non-renewable resource.
Show solution
✦ Answer: Renewable — solar energy / water / forests; Non-renewable — coal / petroleum / minerals.
Q2EASY· Soil
Which soil is most suitable for growing cotton, and where is it mainly found?
Show solution
Black soil (regur), found on the Deccan trap region — Maharashtra, parts of Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh. ✦ Answer: Black (regur) soil, in the Deccan plateau.
Q3EASY· Term
What is Agenda 21?
Show solution
An action plan for achieving sustainable development in the 21st century, adopted at the Rio Earth Summit (1992). ✦ Answer: a 1992 Rio Summit declaration/blueprint for global sustainable development.
Q4MEDIUM· Classification
Differentiate between stock and reserves of resources with an example each.
Show solution
Step 1 — Stock: materials in the environment that can satisfy needs but which we cannot use due to a lack of technology, e.g. hydrogen and oxygen in water as a potential fuel. Step 2 — Reserves: the part of the stock that CAN be put into use with existing technology but is conserved for the future, e.g. water in dams for hydel power. ✦ Answer: stock = not usable yet (no tech); reserve = usable but kept for future.
Q5MEDIUM· Planning
Why is resource planning essential in India?
Show solution
Step 1 — Resources are limited and very unevenly distributed across regions. Step 2 — Unplanned use causes depletion, concentration in few hands, and ecological crises. Step 3 — Planning ensures judicious, balanced and sustainable use across the country. ✦ Answer: limited + uneven resources and the dangers of over-use make planned, sustainable use necessary.
Q6MEDIUM· Land degradation
State any four human activities that cause land degradation.
Show solution
Any four of: deforestation, overgrazing, mining (leaving deep scars/overburden), over-irrigation (waterlogging and salinity), industrial effluents/dumping, and quarrying. ✦ Answer: any four valid causes as above.
Q7HARD· Soils
Describe the formation and characteristics of black soil. Why is it called 'self-ploughing'?
Show solution
Step 1 — Black soil forms from the weathering of the volcanic Deccan trap lava (basalt). Step 2 — It is made of fine clayey material, is rich in lime, iron, magnesium and potash but poor in phosphorus and nitrogen, and retains moisture well. Step 3 — In the dry season it develops deep, wide cracks; this aeration of the soil is why it is called 'self-ploughing'. ✦ Answer: weathered lava clay; moisture-retentive; cracks in summer → 'self-ploughing'; ideal for cotton.
Q8HARD· Conservation
Explain any three methods of soil conservation used on slopes and in dry regions.
Show solution
Step 1 — Contour ploughing: ploughing along the contour lines of a slope slows down water run-off. Step 2 — Terrace farming: cutting steps into hillsides reduces erosion (common in hilly regions). Step 3 — Strip cropping / shelter belts: alternating strips of crops and rows of trees/plants break the force of wind and water and hold the soil. ✦ Answer: contour ploughing, terrace farming, strip cropping/shelter belts (any three).
Q9HARD· Sustainable development
What is sustainable development? Explain its importance, referring to Gandhiji's view and the Rio Summit.
Show solution
Step 1 — Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs, and without damaging the environment. Step 2 — Importance: resources are finite; over-use causes depletion, inequality and ecological crisis, so balanced use safeguards both people and the planet. Step 3 — Gandhiji's view: 'There is enough for everybody's need but not for anybody's greed' — he blamed greed and exploitative technology. Step 4 — The Rio Earth Summit (1992) adopted Agenda 21, a global action plan to achieve sustainable development. ✦ Answer: definition + why finite/uneven resources need it + Gandhiji's quote + Rio 1992/Agenda 21.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Resource = anything usable to meet needs; a function of human activity (tech + economic + cultural feasibility).
  • By origin: biotic/abiotic; by exhaustibility: renewable/non-renewable; by ownership: individual/community/national/international.
  • By development status: potential, developed, stock (no tech), reserve (usable, kept for future).
  • Resource planning needed because resources are limited and unevenly distributed.
  • Sustainable development: meet present needs without harming future generations; Rio 1992 → Agenda 21.
  • Major soils: alluvial (most fertile, plains), black/regur (cotton, Deccan), red-yellow, laterite (tea/coffee), arid (Rajasthan), forest.
  • Land degradation: deforestation, overgrazing, mining, over-irrigation (waterlogging/salinity), effluents.
  • Soil conservation: contour ploughing, terrace farming, strip cropping, shelter belts.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

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

Typical chapter weightage: 4–6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / very short11–2Resource types, soil-crop pairs, Agenda 21
Short answer2–31–2Stock vs reserve; resource planning; soil characteristics
Long answer40–1Sustainable development; soil conservation
Map work10–1Soil regions / land-use
Prep strategy
  • Memorise the classification table, especially stock vs reserve and potential vs developed
  • Make a soil table: type → feature → region → crop
  • Learn Gandhiji's quote and the Rio 1992/Agenda 21 facts for sustainable-development answers
  • List causes and cures of land/soil degradation as quick bullet points

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Solar parks in Rajasthan

Rajasthan's huge solar 'potential resource' is being developed into one of India's largest renewable-energy hubs.

Watershed and dam planning

Reserves of river water are managed in dams for hydel power and irrigation — resource planning in action.

Crop choice by soil

Farmers match crops to soil — cotton on black soil, tea on laterite — exactly as this chapter explains.

Soil conservation schemes

Government afforestation, terrace farming and shelter-belt programmes reduce erosion across India.

Sustainable-development goals

The UN SDGs and India's environment policy descend from the Rio 1992 idea of sustainable development.

Reclaiming ravines

Projects to reclaim the Chambal badlands turn eroded gully land back into usable farmland.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Use the classification table as the backbone of any 'types of resources' answer.
  2. For soil questions, always give one distinguishing feature plus a crop or region.
  3. Define sustainable development precisely and support it with Gandhiji's quote and Rio 1992.
  4. List causes and remedies of land/soil degradation as crisp bullets.
  5. Practise the India soil/land-use map for the map question.
  6. Use Rajasthan-specific examples (arid soil, solar potential, Chambal ravines) to add relevance.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Resource economics — the difference between renewable flow rates and rates of extraction.
  • The carbon cycle and why fossil fuels are effectively non-renewable on human timescales.
  • Soil science basics — soil horizons, pH and nutrient management.
  • Measuring sustainability — ecological footprint and carrying capacity.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

RBSE Class 10 Board (BSER Ajmer)High — soil types and sustainable development almost every year
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — geography MCQs on resources and soils
UPSC / State PCSMedium — Indian geography and environment
Science Olympiad / Geo quizzesLow–Medium — resource and soil classification

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Yes. RBSE prescribes NCERT 'Contemporary India-II' for Class 10 Geography, so this chapter is identical. RBSE (BSER Ajmer) sets the exam pattern and marking.

Because something in nature becomes a resource only when humans have the technology, economic ability and cultural acceptance to use it. Uranium was just rock until nuclear technology made it a resource.

Renewable resources can be replenished within a short time (solar, wind, water, forests). Non-renewable resources take millions of years to form and get exhausted with use (coal, petroleum, minerals).

Arid (desert) soil dominates Rajasthan. It is sandy, often saline, and low in humus and moisture because of the dry climate. With irrigation and proper treatment it can be made cultivable.

Running water erodes the soil into deep channels called gullies. When the land becomes unfit for cultivation due to extensive gullies, it is called badland — the Chambal basin ravines are a classic example of gully erosion.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 15 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo