More Questions
Multiple Choice Questions
1. Rapid sliding of large mass of bedrocks is called:
(a) Erosion
(b) Earthquake
(c) Tsunami
(d) Landslides
Solution:
(d) Landslides
2. In how many regions has India been divided on the basis of proneness to earthquake?
(a) Five Regions
(b) Seven Regions
(c) Eight Regions
(d) Ten Regions
Solution:
(a) Five Regions
3. From the point of view of earthquake, which areas of India are most vulnerable?
(a) Northern Himalayas and Kachchh
(b) North-eastern India
(c) Northern Plains
(d) Peninsular India
Solution:
(a) Northern Himalayas and Kachchh
4. Natural calamities which cause heavy loss to life and property are called:
(a) Famine
(b) Disaster
(c) Calamity
(d) None of these
Solution:
(b) Disaster
5. The centre of the cyclone is mostly a warm and low-pressure, cloudless core known as:
(a) Storm Surge
(b) Eye of the storm
(c) Cyclone
(d) Jet Stream
Solution:
(b) Eye of the storm
6. Which regions have highest number of landslides?
(a) Plateau regions
(b) Mountainous regions
(c) Coastal Regions
(d) Desert regions
Solution:
(b) Mountainous regions
7. Which region of India is most prone to drought?
(a) Rajasthan
(b) Andhra Pradesh
(c) Tamil Nadu
(d) Coastal Regions
Solution:
(a) Rajasthan
8. Natural changes which have side effects on human life are called:
(a) Common Hazards
(b) Manmade hazards
(c) Natural Hazards
(d) None of the above
Solution:
(c) Natural Hazards
9. Which of the following is not a natural calamity?
(a) Earthquake
(b) Drought
(c) Fire Borne
(d) Tsunami
Solution:
(c) Fire Borne
10. Which of the following is not a flood prone area?
(a) Assam
(b) West Bengal
(c) Bihar
(d) Rajasthan
Solution:
(d) Rajasthan
11. Which of the following is not a earthquake prone area?
(a) Jammu and Kashmir
(b) Himachal Pradesh
(c) Uttarakhand
(d) East Coast
Solution:
(d) East Coast
12. Which of the following is not a landslide-prone area?
(a) Himalayas and Andaman and Nicobar
(b) Steep slopes in the Western Ghats
(c) Nilgiris in the north-eastern regions
(d) Aravali regions in Rajasthan
Solution:
(d) Aravali regions in Rajasthan
13. Which of the following is not a type of drought?
(a) Meteorological Drought
(b) Agricultural Drought
(c) Hydrological Drought
(d) Desert Drought
Solution:
(d) Desert Drought
Very Short Answer Type Questions
1. What are natural calamities?
Solution:
Natural calamities are elements of circumstances in the Natural environment that have the potential to cause harm to people or propertv or both.
2. Name some common natural calamities.
Solution:
Some important natural disasters are earthquake, floods, tsunamis, drought, landslides, cyclones, volcanoes, tornado, hailstorms, dust storms, hurricanes, etc.
3. What is a disaster?
Solution:
Disaster is an undesirable occurrence resulting from forces that are largely outside human control, strikes quickly with little or no warning, which causes or threatens serious disruption of life and property including death and injury to a large number of people, and requires therefore, mobilisation of efforts in excess of that which are normally provided by statutory emergency services.
4. What is the unit of measuring earthquake?
Solution:
Richter scale is the unit of measuring earthquake.
5. Name the states of India having high risk of earthquake.
Solution:
Areas of North-eastern states, Darbhanga and Araria along the Indo- Nepal border in Bihar, Uttarakhand, Western Himachal Pradesh and Kashmir Valley in the Himalayan region and the Kutch (Gujarat), Northern parts of Punjab, Eastern parts of Haryana, Delhi, Western Uttar Pradesh, and Northern Bihar fall under the High Damage Risk Zone.
6. Mention the speed of cyclones.
Solution:
Cyclones move with a speed of 20 km per hour. As it moves further, its energy keeps on reducing. Its duration is 5 to 7 days.
7. Name flood prone areas of India.
Solution:
Assam, West Bengal and Bihar are among the high flood-prone states of India. Apart from these, most of the rivers in the northern states like Punjab and Uttar Pradesh are also vulnerable to occasional floods.
8. Mention three causes due to which flood affected areas have increased in India.
Solution:
Three causes due to which flood affected areas have increased in India:
- Deforestation
- Barrier in flow of water by means of transport and buildings.
- Construction of dams.
9. What is disaster management?
Solution:
Disaster management is inclusive of all those processes and preparations which are undertaken to mitigate the losses from disasters. It includes steps that should be taken before disaster, during disaster and after disaster.
10. On the basis of origin, in how many groups are calamities categorized?
Solution:
On the basis of origin, natural disasters have been classified into four groups:
- Atmospheric: Thunderstorm, Tornado, Drought, Hailstorm
- Terrestrial: Earthquake, Volcanic Eruption, Avalanches, Soil Erosion
- Aquatic: Floods, Tidal Waves, Storm Surge, Tsunami
- Biological: Viral Diseases, Plants and Animals as colonisers.
11. National Institute of Disaster Management, have made an intensive analysis of more than 1,200 earthquakes that have occurred in India in different years in the past and has divided into how many zones?
Solution:
National Geophysical Laboratory, Geological Survey of India, Department of Meteorology, Government of India, along with the recently formed National Institute of Disaster Management, have made an intensive analysis of more than 1,200 earthquakes that have occurred in India in different years in the past, and based on these, they divided India into the following five earthquake zones:
- Very high damage risk zone
- High damage risk zone
- Moderate damage risk zone
- Low damage risk zone
- Very low damage risk zone.
12. Expand IDNDR.
Solution:
International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction.
13. How can we control floods?
Solution:
Construction of flood protection embankments in the flood-prone areas, construction of dams, afforestation and discouraging major construction activities in the upper reaches of most of the flood-creating rivers, etc. are some measures to control floods.