Category World Geography

What are various types of construction of Building around the world?

People have constructed buildings from ancient times as homes to provide shelter, monuments or places of worship. Earth, wood and stone have always been used as building materials. Bricks, hardened clay, were first used in the Middle East in about 3000 BC. Concrete is made by mixing sand, cement and water. Reinforced concrete dates from the late 1800s. Often used in modern buildings, it contains steel wires or rods to provide extra strength.

Buildings belong to one of two types. The first type has solid walls, called load-bearing walls that support the floors and roof of the building. The second type has a framework of wood, steel or concrete that bears the weight of the building.

Most buildings need foundations (a solid base) to prevent them from sinking into the ground or falling over. Foundations can be footings (underground walls), flat rafts, or underground supporting pillars called piles that are driven into the ground.

TALL STRUCTURES

The Great Pyramid at Giza in Egypt was the world’s tallest structure for nearly 4000 years, until the great age of cathedral building began in medieval Europe. Lincoln Cathedral in England, which was built in 1311, had a great spire that made it slightly taller than the pyramid, although it was blown down in a storm in 1549. The Washington Monument in Washington, USA, became the world’s tallest structure in 1884, before the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, almost doubled the record five years later. The skyscrapers of the 20th century claimed the honour until the CN Tower, still the world’s tallest self-supporting structure, was built in Toronto in 1976.

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What are various Ports and Water ways?

Even though aircraft now carry many of the world’s passengers, shipping is still a vital link between countries, particularly for carrying cargo. The biggest vessels are called bulk carriers. They include oil supertankers, some of which are more than 450 metres long. Container ships carry general cargo stored in large steel boxes stacked up like building blocks. These can be unloaded directly on to trucks.

The River Rhine rises in Switzerland and runs along the border between France and Germany, then on through Germany and the Netherlands, meeting the North Sea near Rotterdam. It is one of Europe’s most important industrial waterways. As well as barges carrying cargo, river boats take tourists along the river to see the vineyards and ancient castles on its banks.

Ships cross the oceans on fixed routes called shipping lanes. The world’s busiest shipping lanes link Europe and North America with the Middle East and East Asia. Ships go through the Suez and Panama Canals to shorten their journeys, although supertankers, being too large for the Suez Canal, still travel around the southern tip of Africa.

Modern cargo ships are much larger than vessels of the past, and big, efficient ports with docks (enclosed areas of water) are needed so that their cargoes can be loaded and unloaded as quickly as possible. Some ships take cargoes inland along large rivers and man-made waterways called canals.

Two major canals, cut through narrow necks of land, provide much shorter routes between ports. They are the 165-kilometre Suez Canal in Egypt, linking the Mediterranean Sea with the Red Sea, and the 82-kilometre Panama Canal, connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

Canals often link natural waterways and provide a transport route across a continent. The Main-Danube Canal, for example, allows the movement of goods between Eastern and Western Europe. The United States and Canada have more than 41,000 kilometres of waterways linked to the St. Lawrence and Mississippi rivers and their tributaries. The St. Lawrence Seaway connects the Great Lakes, and the cities of Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and Toronto among others, with the Atlantic Ocean.

Cargo on inland waterways in industrial countries, for example, the River Rhine in Germany, is usually carried by barges which are towed by tugs. Sometimes several barges are strapped together. Barges carry cargoes along the Rhine to and from the port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands, the world’s busiest port. Antwerp in Belgium is the largest inland port in the world. Even though it is 89 kilometres from the open sea, ships of all types load and unload cargoes there.

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Throw some light about air travel around the world?

Air travel has grown enormously since World War II. Until then, only the wealthy travelled by air. The development of the jet airliner in the 1950s made it possible for everyone to fly to destinations across the world.

The world’s busiest airport is O’Hare International near Chicago in the United States, with an average of one take-off or landing every 35 seconds and nearly 70 million passengers a year. Many of these flights are for people travelling within the United States – about 85 per cent of people travelling within the United States go by air. London’s Heathrow Airport handles more international traffic than any other airport with more than 55 million international passengers a year.

A large modern airport employs thousands of people. Air traffic controllers work in a control tower, directing all aircraft to and from runways and deciding when it is safe to take off or land. They have powerful radar equipment to keep watch over the whole airspace around the airport.

Baggage handlers load and unload suitcases from the aircraft. Once passengers have disembarked, ground crew prepares the aircraft to fly out again, and refuel it while firefighters stand by.

In the terminal, the passengers collect their baggage and go through customs, where officials check that they are not carrying drugs or goods which require import or export tax to be paid.

Airports also handle goods (air freight) that are required to be transported quickly. Warehouses store goods before loading and after arrival, when they are inspected by customs officials.

Security officers use X-ray equipment to check passengers for bombs, guns and other weapons. International passengers also have to pass through immigration where they show their passports and any visas that are required to enter the country. Officials often stamp the passport to show that passengers are entering the country legally. Airports also have lounges and restaurants where passengers can wait for their flights.

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How and why electricity is considered as a kind of fuel?

Electricity is a type of energy that gives us heat and light and drives machines. To be useful, electricity must be made to flow in a current. In 1831 the British scientist Michael Faraday used a magnet to produce electricity. He moved a loop of wire over the magnet, causing an electric current to flow through the wire. This principle is used to generate electricity in power stations today. In thermal power stations, coal, oil or gas are burned to boil water, producing steam to drive a generator.

The steam from the boiling water rushes through pipes and turns a bladed wheel called a turbine. The turbine is connected to the generator, which consists of a huge magnet surrounded by copper wire. The turbine makes the magnet spin, thus producing an electric current in the wire.

The water can be heated by other means. The mineral uranium is the fuel used in a nuclear power station. Everything on Earth is made up of very tiny particles called atoms. Splitting the atoms that make up uranium produces a very intense heat for creating steam.

In a nuclear power station, energy is produced by creating a reaction in the nuclei (cores) of uranium atoms. Releasing energy by splitting atomic nuclei is called fission. Each nucleus contains particles called neutrons. Inside the reactor, these hit other nuclei, causing them to split and release more neutrons. This repeated process, called a chain reaction, produces immense amounts of heat energy. Water pumped around the reactor is heated.

Hydro-electric power stations use fast-flowing water to turn turbines. The water from rivers is stored in a reservoir behind a dam. The power station is located in front of the dam. Some of the water is allowed to rush out through pipes to make turbines spin and drive the generator.

SUPPLYING ELECTRICITY

The electricity is sent from the power station along thick wires called cables. They are supported above ground by tall pylons. The electric current is boosted by transformers along the way. The electricity goes to sub-stations from where cables carry it to houses, factories, shops and offices.

The cables from a power station are linked to form a country’s supply network or grid. This allows electricity to be sent to wherever it is needed. Electricity cannot be stored, so a constant supply flows through the cables and wires.

ALTERNATIVE POWER

Coal and oil-fired power stations cause pollution. Fossil fuels, once used up, cannot be replaced. Leaks of radioactivity from nuclear power stations are a potential hazard. So alternative methods for generating electricity are needed. Wind turbines on wind farms, solar power (in which solar panels store sunlight for conversion to electricity), tidal and wave power are all possibilities for the future.

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What are fossil fuels?

Fossil fuels – coal, oil and gas were formed from the remains of living things that died millions of years ago and are preserved as fossils.

Coal began to form about 350 million years ago. At that time parts of the Earth’s surface were covered with swamps and lakes. Forests of huge trees and giant ferns grew in the swamps. When these plants died, they rotted down and gradually changed into a type of dark soil called peat. As the centuries passed the peat was buried under layers of sand and mud. Successive layers pressed down more and more tightly until the peat was compressed into layers of hard, black, shiny rock—coal. Folding and faulting of rock layers, the result of Earth movements over millions of years, together with erosion, have brought some coal layers close to the surface and within reach of underground mines.

Coal was first mined as a fuel on an industrial scale in the 18th century when it was used in furnaces to power steam engines and smelt iron. Today it is used in power stations to produce electricity. Coke, a baked form of coal, is a smokeless fuel used in making iron and steel.

OIL AND GAS

Oil is a very important substance. It is used as a fuel in power stations, cars, ships and aircraft, and is an essential raw material for plastics and chemical industries.

Oil and gas were formed in the seas millions of years ago. When the tiny plants and animals that lived in them died they sank to the bottom and were buried under layers of sand and silt. These were gradually compressed into layers of sedimentary rock. The heat action of bacteria changed the remains into crude oil and natural gases.

Pressures in the Earth force the oil up through the sedimentary rock, which has tiny holes in it like a sponge. The oil rises until it comes to a layer of hard rock. If the hard rock has formed a dome over the soft rock, the oil is trapped under it. Geologists looking for oil study the local rock formations and make test drillings. If oil is found, wells are drilled into the ground. When the drill reaches oil, the pressure may be enough to send it gushing up to the surface. If not, it is pumped. The crude oil from the well is sent by pipeline or tanker to a refinery where it is separated into different substances by distillation.

The oil is boiled at the bottom of a huge tank called a fractionating tower. The vapours that are formed float upwards, cool and condense into liquids at different temperatures. Trays at different heights in the tower collect the liquids as they form. These separate parts, or fractions, are formed into different oil products, such as petrol, kerosene and diesel oil. At the top of the tower, gas comes off. The thickest, heaviest products, such as bitumen, used for making roads, sink to the bottom. They can be refined again to make lubricating oils.

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What are the main spots of Mining and Industry around the world?

The earth contains many minerals that are vital to us today. Minerals are non-living substances such as rocks and metals found naturally in the Earth’s crust.

Some metals, such as gold, can be found at the surface, but others are buried deep in the ground and have to be mined. Copper was one of the first metals to be used by people, but it is brittle and breaks if it is hammered too much. Early metalworkers discovered that if they hammered copper, then heated it in the fire and then hammered it again, it was easier to work with. This was the discovery of a process called annealing.

Some metals have to be extracted from the rock, or ore, in which they are found. The process used is called smelting. The rock is heated to a high temperature so that the metal melts and runs out.

Metals found near the surface are mined by the opencast method but those found deeper down have to be drilled out of the ground. First, geologists determine where the metals are. They carry out surveys of the rock layers beneath the surface, and also measure the magnetism of the rocks and minerals. This is because the magnetic field is stronger in rocks that contain metals such as iron, nickel and cobalt.

INDUSTRY

The word “industry” describes an activity that produces the goods or services that people need or want. There are many different kinds of industry, including mining, farming, fishing, manufacturing and the provision of services for people to use.

Industries fall into three groups. Primary industries are those which extract or grow raw materials, such as mining, fishing, farming and forestry. Manufacturing industries, which turn the raw materials into products such as cars, matches, books and buildings, are known as secondary industries. Tertiary industries include transport, shops, health care, banking, education, leisure and tourism.

In many manufacturing industries around the world, for example, cars, plastics and electrical appliances, machines are used instead of people to make goods. Highly automated industries, as they are called, are using more and more specialized equipment such as electronic technology and industrial robots to increase productivity. This has been partly responsible for increasing unemployment in certain countries. During the last part of the 20th century, Japan and other East Asian countries have developed highly automated industries, including electronics, computers and cars.

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Is fishing a kind of farming?

People have been catching fish from the sea, rivers and lakes for thousands of years. Fishing is still a source of food, and an important industry for many people living near the sea. Japan, China and Russia are the largest commercial fishing nations. The world’s major fishing grounds are the areas of relatively shallow waters that lie above the continental shelf – those parts of the Earth’s landmasses that are submerged by ocean waters.

Most sea fish are caught by fishermen working on trawlers. Trawlers are equipped with a large net that is trawled (dragged) along the sea bed. Distant-water trawlers, the most numerous type, can stay at sea for several months. Many of them have freezers so the fish can be gutted and frozen on board. Middle-water trawlers go out for two or three weeks and near-water trawlers for only a few days at a time.

Trawlers catch demersal fish, those kinds that live near the sea bed. North Atlantic trawlers catch cod in the cold waters off Canada, Greenland and Scandinavia. Japanese and American fleets catch tuna in the deep waters of the Pacific Ocean.

Middle-water trawlers catch fish such as halibut and plaice, while near-water vessels catch fish that live in the warmer waters close to shore, such as haddock, plaice, sole and turbot. These boats do not have freezers on board but the fish can be packed in ice to keep them fresh.

Different techniques are used to catch other marine creatures. Lobsters and crabs are caught in small traps called pots. Oysters and scallops are collected with a dredge, a triangular steel frame with a net on it, which is towed along by a fishing boat.

Today, in many traditional fishing grounds numbers of fish are declining fast, the result of overfishing. In the North Atlantic, herring are now almost extinct and there are far fewer cod and haddock. The use of huge factory ships, on which large quantities of fish can be frozen, is severely depleting supplies for local people in developing countries, who rely on fish for their livelihood. There is also concern about the destruction of ocean food chains by overfishing. It is estimated that 20 million tonnes of fish a year are discarded by fishing boats because they are not the right kind – a practice that needlessly reduces stocks of other kinds of fish.

TRADITIONAL FISHING

In some parts of the world, fishermen still go out in small boats and catch fish with hand-held nets, as they have done for centuries. These fishermen catch only enough fish for their local communities.

Whales used to be hunted for their meat and oil. Harpoons and factory ships were used. So many species became endangered that commercial whaling of a number of different species was banned by international agreement in 1986.

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What is Livestock Farming?

At about the same time as people began to grow crops, they also domesticated wild animals for meat, milk and skins or wool. This was the start of livestock farming.

Cattle are kept for milk and meat. There are about 200 million cattle in India alone, with about 1000 million in the rest of the world. Breeds of cattle can be divided into two main groups: the European breeds, which are descended from a now-extinct species of long-horned wild cattle called the auroch, and the various breeds of zebu, the humped cattle of India.

Animals kept for their wool include sheep, goats, rabbits, and vicunas (a type of llama). Of these, sheep are the most common on farms worldwide. Australia is one of the world’s biggest wool producers. Of the 1000 million sheep in the world, about 140 million are in Australia where, in fact, there are many more sheep than people! Australian farmers keep large herds of sheep on huge sheep stations. Most of the sheep are Merinos, a breed that has soft; thick wool and which can survive on the poor grass that is characteristic of the dry grasslands of central Australia.

Some livestock farmers keep pigs for meat. On large modern pig farms, the animals are kept indoors in controlled conditions and fed a mixture which makes them put on the most weight in the shortest time. About 400 breeds of pig have been produced over the centuries but many of these have now disappeared with the development of intensive farming methods. The main surviving breeds include the Berkshire, Chester White, Poland, China, Saddleback, Yorkshire, Duroc, and Razorback. There are about 800 million pigs in the world, half of them in Asia. Their meat is sold as pork (fresh meat), bacon or ham (cured or preserved meat).

POULTRY

Poultry farmers keep chickens, turkeys, geese and other birds for meat and eggs. Chickens are descended from tropical forest birds found in Southeast Asia. They can be reared by intensive or free-range methods. There are about 7000 million chickens in the world. Good breeds for egg-laying include Leghorns and Minorcas. Dorking and Cornish breeds are good for meat, and Orpingtons and Rhode Island Reds are useful for both. Turkeys, ducks and geese are mainly reared for their meat.

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Which kind of main farming is there around the world?

The world relies on farming (also called agriculture) for its food. Farms range in size from large commercial businesses that provide food for sale at home and abroad (cash crops), to small farms that produce only enough food for the community (subsistence farming).

There are several different kinds of farming. Arable farming is the cultivation of crops, which include cereals, vegetables and plants for making industrial products such as oil and cotton cloth. Another type of cultivation is growing trees or vines, such as fruit orchards, vineyards, and rubber or coffee plantations. Livestock farming involves keeping animals such as pigs, cows and sheep for meat, milk or wool. The animals graze on permanent grassland or rough pasture, including heath land, scrub, mountain slopes or tundra grasses. Some farmers concentrate on one type of farming, while others have mixed farms where they both grow crops and keep livestock.

Intensive farming methods are used to increase food production. For example, intensive egg production involves keeping hens in tiny, crowded cages where they spend their lives just laying eggs. Many people regard this type of farming as cruel.

“Free-range” products come from animals kept in more natural surroundings. These include eggs from hens that have been allowed to roam around in the farmyard. Farmers on commercial farms use chemicals to keep pests and weeds at bay. These chemicals cause pollution of the soil and water, and may get into the crops or livestock themselves. Organic farmers do not use artificial pesticides or fertilizers, but enrich the soil with natural fertilizers such as seaweed and manure. Some people prefer free-range and organic products, believing them to taste better and be safer to eat.

Not all farmers settle in one place. Some livestock farmers are nomadic – they move around with their herds, looking for fresh grazing land. Shifting cultivation is a system where arable farmers move on when the soil becomes exhausted. The most common method is slash-and-burn, which is practised in tropical regions such as the Amazon rainforests. Land is cleared by burning patches of forest. After a few years of planting crops such as maize, manioc, millet and yams, the rainforest soil is no longer fertile, so the farmers clear a new area, leaving the previous land to return to its natural state.

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What is Arable Farming?

People first started to grow crops about 12,000 years ago. They discovered that certain wild plants, which produced seeds that were ground for flour to make bread, could be made to grow in fields. Crop, or arable, farming had begun.

Today, huge swathes of land that were once natural grasslands or woodlands are under cultivation. Finding new land to farm is sometimes so important that tropical rainforest, desert and swamp are turned into farmland. Even land under the sea has been reclaimed to find more room for crops.

In rich countries, farmers use modern machines and methods to produce better crop yields – more grain from a certain size of field. In poorer countries, most of the population still work in the fields and depend on a small number of crops, together with a few animals, for their livelihood. They grow only enough food for themselves. This is known as subsistence farming.

THE WORLD’S CROPS

The most important crops are the cereals: wheat, rice, maize, barley, rye and millet. These provide many people with their basic source of food, their staple diet.

Rice is the main food for millions of Asians. Rice-fields, known as paddies, must be flooded, so in hilly country flat shelves of land, or terraces, are built so that the floodwaters do not flow away. The rice seedlings are planted in rows under water, often by hand. After harvesting, the crop is threshed, to separate out the grain, and then winnowed, to lose the husks and grit.

Other important staple crops include beans, peas and lentils. Fruit and vegetables add vitamins and carbohydrates to our diet.

Soya beans, groundnuts and palms are also useful for the oils in their seeds. A range of crops are grown as fodder (livestock feed). They include grasses, some root vegetables and alfalfa.

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