CSP-2015: Key to the
World Geography Test-2 Dt.15.02.2015
1.
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c
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21.
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c
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41.
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d
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2.
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b
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22.
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a
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42.
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c
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3.
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a
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23.
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c
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43.
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d
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4.
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c
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24.
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c
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44.
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c
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5.
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b
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25.
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c
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45.
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b
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6.
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c
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26.
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a
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46.
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a
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7.
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c
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27.
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c
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47.
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a
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8.
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a
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28.
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a
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48.
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b
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9.
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*
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29.
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b
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49.
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b
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10.
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c
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30.
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a
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50.
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d
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11.
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d
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31.
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b
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51.
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b
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12.
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d
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32.
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a
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52.
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c
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13.
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c
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33.
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d
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53.
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a
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14.
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a
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34.
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b
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54.
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c
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15.
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a
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35.
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c
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55.
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c
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16.
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b
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36.
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b
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56.
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d
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17.
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c
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37.
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b
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57.
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c
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18.
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c
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38.
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a
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58.
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b
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19.
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d
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39.
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a
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59.
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c
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20.
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c
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40.
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c
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60.
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c
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Explanation:
2. Water in the earth
layers is limited to lithosphere only. [The detail notes on fresh water is
given in Geography test 1]
3.
Statement 3 is only correct. The Atlantic Ocean, not the Pacific Ocean, has the
longest coast line due to the presence of several big islands such as Greenland
and Iceland and wavy coast of the countries located on its shores. Most of the
productive fishing zones in the world are located in the North Atlantic Ocean
and North Pacific Ocean, but not in the South Atlantic Ocean. The mid-Atlantic
Ocean ridge is the longest Mountain range in the World as it spreads from North
to South in that Ocean and obviously, it is bigger than the Andes of South
America. If the question is on longest mountain range on, it is the Andes;
otherwise, it is the mid-Atlantic Oceanic mountain range.
4.
There is an intricate link between fishing zones of the world and confluence of
warm and cold currents. The meeting of cold waters of Iceland and British Isles
and the warm North Atlantic drift promotes the plankton growth and thereby
fish. Similarly, warm Gulf Stream and cold Labrador Current makes the Grand
banks off Newfoundland and North eastern USA as a major fishing zone and in the
Peruvian coast, the work is done by cold Peruvian Current and warm Northern
Counter Equatorial Current.
5
and 51. The Pacific
Ocean encompasses approximately one-third of the Earth's surface and larger than Earth's entire landmass. [Size of
the Pacific Ocean is 165.2 million square kilometers (63.8 million square
miles), as against Earth’s 150 million square kilometers (58 million square
miles).]. It is triangular in shape. Largest Ocean. It harbors largest number
of Atolls, largest and deepest oceanic trenches and largest number of islands
including, Micronesia, Melanesia and Polynesian island groups. The Ocean
provides for largest fishing grounds and accounts for 60% of the fish catch in
the World with Japan, China, Australia and New Zealand at the helm of affairs.
It has richest resources of oil and gas and largest amounts of poly-metallic
nodules in its bottom.
First two statements are correct in
Q.No.51. As stated above it is the Pacific Ocean, not Indian Ocean, which has
largest quantities of poly-metallic nodules.
At the cost of repetition, Indian Ocean is regarded as “half Ocean” as its distribution is
restricted to Southern Hemisphere; it is the only Ocean named after a country,
i.e., India.
6. Both the
statements are correct. The continental shelf is an underwater landmass which
extends from a continent,
resulting in an area of relatively shallow water known as a shelf sea. The shelf surrounding an island is known as an insular shelf. Much of the shelves were exposed during glacial and interglacial periods. Most commercial exploitation from the sea, such as
metallic-ore, non-metallic ore, and hydrocarbon extraction, takes place on the
continental shelf.
The largest shelf – the Siberian Shelf in the Arctic Ocean – stretches to 1,500 kilometers
(930 mi) in width.
8. See the explanation for the question 15.
9. Statements
2, 3 and 4 are correct. Statement 1 is not correct. The salinity is lesser at
Equatorial region due to heavy rain fall and less relatively evaporation when
compared to tropics from 5 degrees to 30 degrees south and north of Equator.
The salinity of the water bodies is maximum in tropical regions due to heavy
evaporation and inflow of salts from the rivers adding to the salt content.
This further reduces towards temperate regions and lowest near poles. Even in
the same latitudes, the salinity of enclosed seas is higher than in the open
seas. [You may also refer to detailed explanation with examples given in
Geography test 1].
11.
It is the question on correct matching. Correct answer is “d”. Coral Sea is located in the Pacific Ocean,
North East of Australian continent, not in South Atlantic Ocean as given in the
question. As the name indicates, the sea is full of corals and part of one of
the UNESCO Heritage habitats in the World. [See the explanation for the
question 32.]
14.
The Amazon River is the largest river basin in the world and discharges largest
fresh water into the Atlantic Ocean. Its discharge of water into the Ocean is greater than the next seven largest independent rivers
combined. Hence, correct answer is “a”.
15.
The latitudinal distribution of temperature on the Oceans is called “horizontal
distribution of temperature”. The distribution of temperature in the water body
from surface to its bottom is called “Vertical distribution of
temperature”. The surface temperature of
the Ocean or sea varies with the latitude. It would be more in the tropics when
compared to temperate zones and further less in the Poles. The surface
temperature of the Oceans or seas remains almost constant up to 100m depth, but
below this depth temperature continuously falls and the deepest part of the sea
is always coldest. This is because of the fact that surface of the water body
has the maximum exposure to the sun’s energy. Thus, all the warm currents
originate near the equator and move towards poles.
The
annual range [difference between the minimum and maximum temperature of water
in a year] of the surface temperature of Ocean is very low. This is due to two
unusual properties of water,
ü High specific heat capacity and
ü High heat of vaporization
(40.65 kJ/mol or 2257 kJ/kg at the normal boiling point).
Water
has a very high specific heat capacity, the
second highest among all the hetero-atomic species. [Ammonia has highest
specific heat capacity under the category]. Both of these properties are as a
result of the extensive hydrogen bonding between
its molecules. These two unusual properties allow water to moderate Earth's climate by buffering large
fluctuations in temperature. The oceans absorb one thousand times more heat
than the atmosphere (air) and are holding 80 to 90% of the heat of global warming.
The
annual range of temperature is more near the coast and less in the open sea.
This is due to the fact that land gets heated very fast and loses heat also
very fast. The overheating of the land has its effect on the heating on the
water adjacent to it and further shallow water is tends to be heated more than
open sea. Hence, the range of temperature is little bit more near the coast
than in open water.
[Important Additional information: The melting ice
absorbs the same energy as ice warming from -160 degrees Celsius up to its
melting point. This property confers resistance to melting on the ice of glaciers and drift ice. Before and
since the advent of mechanical refrigeration,
ice was and still is in common use for retarding food spoilage. Further, the water has maximum density
at 4 degree Celsius, but not at 0 degree Celsius and below this temperature, water
shrinks to become ice at 0 degrees. In other words, ice is less dense than water
and thus ice floats on the water. This is the only reason why the lakes, seas and
Oceans in the Polar Regions froze from the top and still allow animals to live
in the water below the ice.]
16. The landlocked seas in the world are Aral Sea, Caspian
Sea, Dead Sea, Great Salt Lake, Salton Sea and Sea of Galilee. Landlocked seas
may are also considered lakes as the definition of a lake is "a large body
of freshwater surrounded by land. Hence, in the instant question the only
enclosed seas are Sea of Galilee in Israel [The Sea of Galilee, also Kinneret,
Lake of Gennesaret, or Lake Tiberias, is the largest freshwater lake in Israel]
and Salton Sea, California, USA. [The Salton Sea is a shallow, saline, Rift
Lake located directly on the San Andreas Fault, predominantly in California of
USA]
The Bismarck Sea lies in the southwestern Pacific Ocean to
the north of the island of Papua New Guinea and to the south of the Bismarck
Archipelago and Admiralty Islands. Celebes Sea is located in Western Pacific
Ocean, east to Borneo Island and north of Indonesia. Coral Sea is already
explained above.
17. The
Wallace Line is an imaginary boundary that runs between Australia and the Asian
islands and mainland. This boundary marks the point where there is a difference
in species on either side of the line. To the west of the line, all of the
species are similar or derived from species that are found on the Asian
mainland. To the east of the line, there are many species that of Australian
descent. Wallace's Line delineates Australian
and Southeast Asian fauna. The probable extent of land at the time of the last glacial maximum, when the sea
level was more than 110 m lower than today, is shown in grey. The deep water of
the Lombok Strait between Bali
and Lombok formed a water barrier even when lower sea levels linked the
now-separated islands and landmasses on either side
Wallace's Line delineates Australian and Southeast Asian
fauna. The probable extent of land at the time of the last glacial maximum, when the sea
level was more than 110 m lower than today, is shown in grey. The deep water of
the Lombok Strait between Bali
and Lombok formed a water barrier even when lower sea levels linked the
now-separated islands and landmasses on either side.
19. UNCLOS divides the sea into various legal zones, with
the state’s sovereignty decreasing with increasing distance from the coast.
Every state has the right to territorial sea, not exceeding 12 nautical miles,
in addition to its internal waters. In the territorial sea, the sovereignty of
the coastal state is already restricted under international law, as ships of
all states enjoy the right of innocent passage through it. The water zone next
to territorial sea is contiguous zone. This zone extends up to 24 nautical miles from the baseline, within which a state
can exert limited control for the purpose of preventing or punishing
"infringement of its customs, fiscal, immigration or sanitary laws and
regulations within its territory or territorial sea". In the
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), which extends for up to 200 nautical miles, the
coastal state has sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring and exploiting
the natural resources, whether living or non-living, of the waters. On the
continental shelf, which may extend beyond the EEZ, the coastal state has
sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring and exploiting the natural
resources, whether living or non-living, on or under the seabed.
In view of the above, under UNCLOS, the coastal State has
sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring and exploiting the natural resources
across EEZ and even up to the continental shelf if it goes beyond EEZ. Thus, the 4th statement is wrong
and first three are correct.
22
and 23. The Montreux Convention
Regarding the Regime of the Straits is
a 1936 agreement that gives Turkey control
over the Bosporus straits and the Dardanelles and regulates the transit of naval
warships. The Convention gives Turkey full control over the Straits and
guarantees the free passage of civilian vessels in peacetime. It restricts the
passage of naval ships not belonging to Black Sea states. The terms of the
convention have been the source of controversy over the years, most notably
concerning the Soviet Union’s military
access to the Mediterranean Sea. Signed on 20 July 1936 at the Montreux Palace in Switzerland, it permitted Turkey to
remilitarize the Straits. It went into effect on 9 November 1936 and was
registered in League of
Nations Treaty Series on 11
December 1936. It is still in
force today, with some amendments.
The
proposed controversial 21st century “Kanal
Istanbul project” may constitute a possible by-pass to the Montreux
Convention and force greater Turkish autonomy with respect to the passage of
military ships from the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara. The project under
consideration, intended to connect the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara is
wished to be completed for the 100th
anniversary in 2023 of the foundation of the Turkish Republic.
25 &
26. The location of cold currents and deserts are linked
intricately. The winds blowing from the Oceans/Seas carry moisture and cause
rainfall in the land. The nature of currents washing the coasts and nature of
winds blowing in certain regions mostly in western part of the continents contribute
to the formation of the deserts.
Role
of prevailing winds in forming the deserts:
The prevailing winds, i.e. those
blows for most of the year, blow from the east. By the time they reach the
interior of the continental areas they have lost the moisture they carried in
from the oceans. This is often because mountain barriers have forced the winds
to deposit their moisture on the eastern parts of the continents and lose the
moisture and become dry by that time they reach western part of the continent.
Certain deserts lie on the leeward, i.e. downwind, side of the mountains. They
are said to lie in a rain shadow area. Some of the desert areas of the United
States, central Asia and Argentina have developed in rain shadow areas. Look in
an atlas and see if you can find out the names of the mountain ranges that
block the rain coming to these deserts.
Role
of prevailing winds in forming the deserts:
Cold ocean currents bowing along the
nearby coasts are another factor contributing to the formation of desert. Cold
ocean currents cool the lower layers of the atmosphere. Not only does the air
not pick up any moisture as it blows across these currents but it is more
likely to lose moisture. This cool dry air moves in over the land where it is
warmed. As it warms, it expands and has room to carry the moisture that it
picks up from the land area. Moisture is evaporated from the land rather than
deposited upon it.
32
& 55. Reef-building
corals cannot tolerate water temperatures below 64° Fahrenheit (18° Celsius).
Many grow optimally in water temperatures between 73° and 84° Fahrenheit
(23°–29°Celsius), but some can tolerate temperatures as high as 104° Fahrenheit
(40° Celsius) for short periods.
Most reef-building
corals also require very saline/salty water ranging from 32 to 42 parts per
thousand. This is the reason why all corals are completely marine. They never
live in estuaries and mouths of the rivers as they would not get the salinity
of 32 to 42 ppt and also muddy water lacks transparency required for carrying
sun rays to corals.
The water must also
be clear so that a maximum amount of light penetrates it. This is because most
reef-building corals contain photosynthetic algae, called zooxanthellae, which
live in their tissues. The corals and algae have a unique relationship. The
coral provides the algae with a protected environment and compounds they need
for photosynthesis. In return, the algae produce oxygen and help the coral to
remove wastes. Most importantly, zooxanthellae supply the coral with food. The
algae need light in order to produce food via photosynthesis.
Distribution of
corals in the World
One interesting research found that corals are distributed
beyond tropics for a brief period during summer in Northern Hemisphere. This is
due to shifting of the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone
or ITCZ beyond tropics. [This is a belt of low pressure which circles the Earth
generally near the equator where the trade winds of the Northern and Southern
Hemispheres come together.]. These temporary hot conditions for few months
create congenial conditions of temperature and salinity for the growth of
corals in the oceans beyond tropical zone. Example corals are found in summer
in North Atlantic Ocean. Hence, the correct option is “a”.
Corals are very productive zones of Oceans. They are compared
to tropical evergreen forests in term of biodiversity and productivity is
concerned. As stated elsewhere, atolls are type of corals mostly distributed in
the Pacific Ocean.
35. Except where otherwise provided in this Convention, the
normal baseline for measuring the breadth of the territorial sea is the
low-water line along the coast as marked on large-scale charts officially
recognized by the coastal State. It is the line from which the
territorial waters/contiguous zone & EEZ under UNCLOS are measured. The
system of straight baselines may not be applied by a State in such a manner as
to cut off the territorial sea of another State from the high seas or an
exclusive economic zone. The UNCLOS clearly defined and provided methodology of
drawing baselines on the basis of shape of the coastline. The method differs
for the archipelago countries and other countries.
36, 37
& 40. The International Tribunal for the Law
of the Sea (ITLOS) is
an intergovernmental organization created
by the mandate of the UNCLOS-III. It was established by the UNCLOS, signed at Montego Bay, Jamaica, on December 10,
1982. The Convention entered into force on November 16, 1994, and established
an international framework for law over "all ocean space, its uses and
resources". The Tribunal is based
in Hamburg, Germany. The Convention also established the International Seabed
Authority, with responsibility for the regulation of seabed mining beyond the
limits of national jurisdiction that is beyond the limits of the territorial sea,
the contiguous zone and the continental shelf.
The Tribunal has the
power to settle disputes between party states (there are currently 161: 160
states plus the European Union).
The Straddling Fish Stocks Agreement (formally,
the Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of the United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 relating to the
Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish
Stocks) is a multilateral
treaty created by the United
Nations to enhance the cooperative management of fisheries
resources that span wide areas, and are of economic and environmental concern
to a number of nations. As of September 2014, the treaty had been ratified by
82 parties, which includes 81 states and the European
Union.
Straddling stocks are
fish stocks that migrate through,
or occur in, more than one EEZ.
The Agreement was adopted in 1995, and came into force in 2001.
Highly migratory fish is a term which has its origins in the UNCLOS. It refers to fish species which undertake
ocean migrations and also have wide geographic distributions, and usually
denotes tuna and tuna-like
species, Shark, Marlin and Swordfish. Straddling fish stocks are
especially vulnerable to overexploitation because of ineffective management
regimes and noncompliance by fishing interests.
United Nations
Environment Programme [UNEP]:
Under UNEP, there are two conventions working towards
protection and conservation of marine mammals and bio-diversity of Oceans/Seas.
They are Convention on Biological Diversity and
Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species
of Wild Animals
1.
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD):
Signed by 150 government leaders at the 1992 Rio Earth
Summit, the Convention on Biological Diversity is dedicated to promoting
sustainable development. Conceived as a practical tool for translating the
principles of Agenda 21 into reality, the Convention recognizes that biological
diversity is about more than plants, animals and microorganisms and their
ecosystems – it is about people and our need for food security, medicines,
fresh air and water, shelter, and a clean and healthy environment in which to
live.
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), known informally as the Biodiversity Convention, is a multilateral treaty. The Convention
has three main goals:
1.
conservation
of biological diversity (or biodiversity);
2.
sustainable
use of its components; and
3.
fair
and equitable sharing of benefits arising from genetic resources
In other words, its
objective is to develop national strategies for the conservation and
sustainable use of biological diversity. It is often seen as the key document
regarding sustainable development .
The Convention was
opened for signature at the Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro on 5 June 1992 and entered into force on
29 December 1993.
At the 2010 10th
Conference of Parties (COP) to the Convention on Biological Diversity in
October in Nagoya , Japan, the
Nagoya Protocol was adopted. On 22 December 2010, the UN declared the period
from 2011 to 2020 as the UN Decade on Biodiversity. They, hence, followed a
recommendation of the CBD signatories during COP10 at Nagoya in October 2010.
2. The Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild
Animals:
It is more commonly
abbreviated to just the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) or the Bonn Convention-aims to
conserve terrestrial, marine and avian migratory species throughout their range. It is an
intergovernmental treaty, concluded under the aegis of the UNEP, concerned with the conservation
of wildlife and habitats on a global scale. Since the Convention's entry into
force, its membership has grown steadily to include over 100 Parties from
Africa, Central and South America, Asia, Europe and Oceania. The Convention was
signed in 1979 in Bad Godesberg, a suburb of Bonn
(hence the name), and entered into force in 1983. The depositary is the
government of the Federal Republic of
Germany. The CMS is the only global and UN-based intergovernmental
organization established exclusively for the conservation and management of
terrestrial, aquatic and avian migratory species throughout their range. CMS
and its daughter agreements determine policy and provide further guidance on
specific issues through their Strategic Plans, Action Plans, resolutions,
decisions and guidelines. All maintain on their websites a list of all
decisions taken, guidelines issues and Action Plans adopted by the Member
States.
FAO
and International Whaling Commission are also involved in conservation of
marine resources and mammals.
39. The Arctic is a region of greater economic and
environmental importance than is suggested by its relatively small area and
remoteness. The Arctic Ocean comprises only about 5 percent of the area of the
global ocean yet contains about 25 percent of the global continental shelf.
Arctic continental shelves are rich in mineral resources but remain relatively
unexplored due to climatic conditions. But, due to high melting of ice during
summers and forming of shipping channels would pave way for the exploration of
these resources. Further, the Arctic
Ocean accounts for only about 1.5 percent of the volume of the global ocean,
yet receives about 10 percent of global river runoff, and thus is influenced by
inflow of fresh water and entrained materials to a greater extent than other
oceans. Because of the great commercial and environmental significance of the
region, it is of vital importance to gain fundamental knowledge about the
Arctic Ocean and adjacent ice-bearing seas (e.g., the Chukchi and Bering), as
well as the processes that link this area to the global system. In view of this
first 3 points are correct and the fourth one is wrong.
41. The world’s largest island is Greenland which
is located in northern Atlantic Ocean. If we exclude Australia as an island,
because it is counted as a continent and country, the second largest island is
New Guinea and the third is Borneo of Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei. New
Guinea and Borneo are located in the Pacific Ocean. Hence, both the statements
are not correct. If we include Australia in the list of the islands, the answer
will not change as Australia is also located in the Pacific/Indian Ocean.
42.
Both the statements are correct. Maritime
Effect and Continental Effect: An inland location is further away from the sea,
while a coastal location is close to the sea. The land heats up and cools down
more quickly than the sea. During the summer, the air over the land heats up
quickly, while the air over the sea remains relatively cool because the sea
gains heat much slower than the land. Onshore winds blow cooler air towards the
land, lowering the summer temperatures of the areas along the coast. During
winter, the air over the sea remains relatively warm compared to the air over
the land because the sea loses heat slower than the land. The onshore winds
blow warmer air towards the land, raising the winter temperatures of the
coastal areas. As a result of the maritime effect, the coastal areas are likely
to experience cooler summers and warmer winters. Hence, there is a smaller
difference between summer and winter temperatures. As a result of the
continental effect, the sea does not influence the temperatures of places
inland. Instead, these places are likely to experience warmer summers and
colder winters and hence have a large difference between summer and winter
temperatures. For example, let us take
two Indian cities based on their location from the coast, New Delhi and Mumbai.
The New Delhi is located in the interior position, long away from the coast face
extreme climatic conditions. The winters are severely cold and summers are
extremely hot. On the other hand Mumbai city is located on the Arabian
coast. Its summers are not harsh and
winters are warmer.
44. The details of
countries visited by Indian PM and the purpose of visit are depicted in the
following table. Given the latest trends of UPSC questioning pattern, you may
focus on these countries from the perspective of Physiography, Economic and
Human Geography.
|
Country & time
of visit
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Purpose
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1
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Bhutan
June, 2014
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Modi
made his first foreign visit to Bhutan following an invitation by King Jigme
Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck and
Tobgay. The visit was called by the media as a "charm offensive"
that would also seek to check Bhutan-China relations that had recently been
formalized. He also sought to build business ties, including a hydro-electric deal, and
inaugurated the India-funded Supreme Court of Bhutan building. While talking
about the visit, Modi said that Bhutan was a "natural choice" for
his first foreign destination because of the "unique and special relationship"
the two countries shared. He added that he was looking forward to nurture and
further strengthens India's special relations with Bhutan. He was further set
to discuss the insurgency in Northeast
India, and China.
|
2
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Brazil
July 2014
|
In
July 2014, he visited Brazil for his first multilateral visit, the 6th
BRICS summit was
held at the north-eastern beach city of Fortaleza. In the Fortaleza summit the group have
agreed to establish a financial institution rivaling the western dominated World
Bank and IMF,
The bank would be named the New Development Bank as suggested by the
Indian side but Modi govt. failed to bag the bank's headquarter for New
Delhi, which would be located in Shanghai,
China. Later the BRICS leader also attended an event in Brasilia where they met the UNASUR heads of government.
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3
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Nepal
August, 2014
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Modi
arrived for a two-day visit to Nepal on 3 August. The last visit of an Indian
prime minister to Nepal was 17 years ago in 1997 by I.
K. Gujral. The talks with Nepal were focused on reviewing the 1950's
Treaty of Peace and Friendship, India-funded hydroelectricity projects in Nepal and other infrastructure projects
in Nepal. Following Jana Andolan,
that marked the beginning of constitutional democracy in 1990, Modi became
the first foreign leader to address the Parliament of Nepal. The Western media read it as a shift
in foreign affairs for India, as
well as a Nepal policy shift.[14] He did puja at the fifth centuryHindu Pashupatinath
temple (where he
donated Rs. 25 crores and
the head priest, Mool Bhatta Ganesh Bhatta, said: "I told him that we
see him as a mascot for Hinduism, and appreciate his efforts in saving Hindu
culture"). Further he
pledged not to interfere in Nepal's internal affairs (following controversy
of appointment of Indian priests at a Nepali temple, Modi announced a credit
assistance programme of US$1 billion to Nepal and said "Nepal can free
India of its darkness with its electricity. But we don't want free electricity,
we want to buy it. Just by selling electricity to India, Nepal can find a
place in the developed countries of the world." He also told Nepali MPs
he wanted to turn India's "hostile borders benign and ultimately
gateways for free trade and commerce...borders must be bridges not
barriers." The Kathmandu
Post reacted
in writing: "Modi mantra warms Nepal's hearts. "The New
York Times also
suggested the lack of a meeting with former King
Gyanendra
signified that India would not support a
return to monarchy despite the
lack of a new constitution of Nepal. The commonality
of a majority Hindu heritage was also played up
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4
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Japan
Aug-Sept. 2014
|
He
visited Japan on a five-day official trip from 30 August to 3 September which
is labeled as his fist bilateral state visit outside the subcontinent.
His 2014 visit further strengthened the ties between the two countries, and
resulted in several key agreements, including the elevating the already
established strategic partnership to the "Special Strategic Global
Partnership". During his visit official negotiations have progressed on
the sale of US 2 amphibious aircraft for
Indian Navy and the long pending civil nuclear agreements
|
5
|
USA
Sept. 2014
|
Modi
delivered his maiden speech in the sixty-ninth
session of the United Nations General Assembly on 27 September 2014,
where he called for reform and expansion of United Nations Security
Council including
India's long standing demand of a permanent membership. He expressed his
concerns over the relevance of a 20th century setup in 21st century and the
need to evaluate UN's performance in the past 70 years. He had also argued
why UN should serve as G-All for global governance instead of several
parallel sub-groupings like G7, G20etc.
In the wake of ISIS threat in West Asia and
similar in other parts of the globe he urged for immediate implementation of
'Comprehensive on International Terrorism' by the UN and offered India's
pro-active role in it citing India as a victim of terrorism for decades.
Prior to his speech he along with External Affairs Minister Swaraj met UN
Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon
and discussed UN governance relating issues.
Ridiculing the possibility of any multilateral intervention, a demand Sharif has made in his address
at the UNGA on 26 September, on Kashmir related mater he stated that his govt
is ready for 'bilateral talk' to Pakistan provided Pakistan should cultivate
suitable environment for talks by giving up terrorism policy against India.[24] Modi commented briefly
on climate change and use of clean energy, in this regards he also asked
world leaders and UN officials for observing Yoga Day, emphasizing the
importance of incorporating Yoga in modern day life style. Modi fasted during a White
House dinner
in his honor
|
6
|
Myanmar
Nov. 2014
|
East Asia Summit
|
7
|
Australia
Nov. 2014
|
|
8
|
Fiji
Nov. 2014
|
In
more than 33 years Modi became the first Indian head of government to visit
Fiji after Indira Gandhi's visit in 1981. There
he also attended a 'Forum for India-Pacific Island cooperation' along with
leaders from all 14 Pacific islands nations
|
9
|
Nepal
Nov. 2014
|
SAARC
Summit
|
10
|
Seychelles
March, 2015
|
As
part of Modi's Indian Ocean outreach. He
hold talks with President James
Alexis Michel
to strengthen maritime ties and enhance
bilateral development cooperation
|
11
|
Mauritius
March, 2015
|
Modi
was the Chief guest at the Mauritian National Day on 12 March
|
12
|
Sri Lanka
March, 2015
|
Earlier
Modi was scheduled to visit Sri Lanka in January 2015, but following the inauguration of the new
President Maithripala
Sirisena, who will in turn pay a
visit to New Delhi in February, Modi made his reciprocal visit to the island
country from 13-15 March 2015. During this trip Modi also visited to Jafna in
the Northern Province
|
46. The International Commission for the
Conservation of Atlantic Tunas [ICCAT] is an
inter-governmental fishery organization responsible for the conservation of
tunas and tuna-like species in the Atlantic Ocean and its adjacent seas. ICCAT compiles fishery statistics
from its members and from all entities fishing for these species in the
Atlantic Ocean, coordinates research, including
stock assessment, on behalf of its members, develops scientific-based
management advice, provides a mechanism for
Contracting Parties to agree on management measures, and produces relevant
publications. Science underpins the management
decisions made by ICCAT. Much of the information available
on this site relates to scientific data, reports of scientific
meetings and to scientific articles.
49. International
Seabed Authority is an intergovernmental organization set up under UNCLOS and
has 159 members and the European Union, composed of all parties
to the UNCLOS. The main mandate of ISA is to organize and control
all mineral-related activities in the international seabed area beyond the
limits of national jurisdiction. There are no maps annexed to
the Convention to delineate this area. Rather, UNCLOS outlines the areas of
national jurisdiction, leaving the rest for the international portion. National
jurisdiction over the seabed normally leaves off at 200 nautical miles
(370 km) seaward from baselines running along the shore, unless a nation
can demonstrate that its continental
Shelf is naturally prolonged beyond that limit, in which case it
may claim up to 350 nautical miles (650 km). ISA has no role in
determining this boundary. Rather, this task is left to another body
established by UNCLOS, the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf,
which examines scientific data submitted by coastal states that claim a broader
reach. Maritime boundaries between
states are generally decided by bilateral negotiation (sometimes with the aid
of judicial bodies), not by ISA. ISA give permits for exploitation of seabed
minerals to the members.
52 and 53. Tides refer to the
rise and fall of our oceans’ surfaces. It is caused by the attractive forces of
the Moon and Sun’s gravitational fields as well as the centrifugal force due to
the Earth’s spin. As the positions of these celestial bodies change, so do the
surfaces’ heights. For example, when the Sun and Moon are aligned with the
Earth, water levels in ocean surfaces fronting them are pulled and subsequently
rise.
The gravitational attraction of the
moon causes the oceans to bulge out in the
direction of the moon. Another bulge occurs on the opposite side, since
the Earth is also attracting moon towards it. Hence, two tides occur
each day.
In 1687, Sir Isaac Newton explained that ocean tides result from the
gravitational attraction of the sun and moon on the oceans of the earth.
Newton’s law of universal gravitation states that the gravitational attraction
between two bodies is directly proportional to their masses, and inversely proportional
to the square of the distance between the bodies. Therefore, the greater the
mass of the objects and the closer they are to each other, the greater the
gravitational attraction between them.
The Moon, although
much smaller than the Sun, is much closer. Now, gravitational forces decrease
rapidly as the distance between two masses widen. Thus, the Moon’s gravity has
a larger effect on tides than the Sun. In fact, the Sun’s effect is only about
half that of the Moon’s.
Since the total mass
of the oceans does not change when this happens, part of it that was added to
the high water regions must have come from somewhere. These mass-depleted
regions then experience low water levels. Hence, if water on a beach near you
is advancing, you can be sure that in other parts of the world, it is receding.
Most illustrations
containing the Sun, Moon, Earth and tides depict tides to be most pronounced in
regions near or at the equator. On the contrary, it is actually in these
regions where the difference in high tide and low tide are not as great as
those in other places in the world.
This is because the
bulging of the oceans’ surface follows the Moon’s orbital plane. Now, this
plane is not in line with the Earth’s equatorial plane. Instead, it actually
makes a 23-degree angle relative to it. This essentially allows the water
levels at the equator to seesaw within a relatively smaller range (compared to
the ranges in other places) as the orbiting moon pulls the oceans’ water.
Not all tides are
caused by the relative positions of these celestial bodies. Some bodies of
water, like those that are relatively shallow compared to oceans, experience
changing water levels because of variations in the surrounding atmospheric
pressure. There are also other extreme situations wherein tides are manifested
but have nothing to do with astronomical positioning.
Tsunami: A tidal wave
or tsunami, for example, makes use of the word ‘tide’ and actually exhibits
rise and fall of water levels (in fact, it is very noticeable). However, this phenomenon
is caused entirely by a displacement of a huge amount of water due to
earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, underwater explosions, and others. All these
causes take place on the Earth’s surface and have nothing to do with the Moon
or Sun.
[Additional
information: Our sun is 27 million times larger than our moon. Based on its
mass, the sun's gravitational attraction to the Earth is more than 177 times
greater than that of the moon to the Earth. If tidal forces were based solely
on comparative masses, the sun should have a tide-generating force that is 27
million times greater than that of the moon. However, the sun is 390 times
further from the Earth than is the moon. Thus, its tide-generating force is
reduced by 3903, or about 59 million times less than the moon.
Because of these conditions, the sun’s tide-generating force is about half that
of the moon]
55. There are three processes for the
formation of nodules.
- Hydrogenous process whereby
metals are supplied from the water column and these accrete on a suitable
nuceli. Hydrogenous nodules have smooth surface texture and are rich in
Fe, Co, Ti, P and Pb content. The Mn/Fe ratio of these nodules is ~1.
- Diagenetic process supplies
metals from the underlying sediment through the pore water by
remobilisation. Diagenetic nodules have rough surface texture and are rich
in Mn, Cu, Ni and Zn content. The Mn/Fe ratio is more than 2.5.
- Mixed type which is a
combination of hydrogenous and diagenetic types.
The following are some significant
scientific results:
- Nodule grade (Cu+Ni+Co %) is
inversely related to abundance (kg/sq m).
- Manganese and iron show inverse
relation suggesting their different source.
- Nodules with 2 to 6 cm size
have high Mn, Cu, Ni and Zn concentration.
- Nodules grow with 1-2 mm per
million year.
- Rare earth elements are
supplied to nodules in association with Fe, Ti and P from the seawater.
Nodules of the Central
Indian Ocean Basin (CIOB)
The formation of ferromanganese
nodules on the ocean floor requires a nucleus, low sedimentation rate, oxidizing
conditions and low velocity bottom currents. Bottom topography also plays
an important role in the distribution of manganese nodules. The highest
manganese concentration are generally found in nodules collected from high
relief areas like valleys, followed by hilltops and slopes. Nodule abundance is
least in the plains but have the highest content of Mn, Cu, Ni. In contrast,
nodules from hilltop have lowest concentrations of these metals. The size of
nodule ranges between 2 and 10 cm in diameter, with a majority of them lying
between 2 and 4 cm size range. Nodules in the CIOB are associated with
practically all types of sediment and the nodule abundance varies from traces
to 20 kg/m.
Nodules from siliceous sediment are
smaller in size, rough surface texture, with todorokite as a dominant mineral
enriched in Mn, Cu, Ni and Zn suggesting their supply through early digenetic
process.
Ferromanganese nodules from red clay
area are enriched in Fe, Co, Ti and P suggesting their supply mainly by
hydrogenetic process. Rare earth elements are highly enriched in these nodules
(~800 ppm) and are generally carried by a single authigenic phase consisting of
Fe-Ti-P suggestive of their supply by seawater.
58. A tidal bore, often simply given
as bore in context, is a tidal phenomenon in which the
leading edge of the incoming tide forms a wave (or waves) of water that travels
up a river or narrow bay against the direction of the river or bay's current.
Bore occurs in the rivers mouths of rivers such as Amazon, Hooghly, Colorado,
and Yangtze. The
tidal bores may be dangerous and many bores have had a sinister reputation: the
River Seine (France); the Petitcodiac River (Canada); and the Colorado River
(Mexico), to name a few. In China, despite warning signs erected along the banks
of the Qiantang River, a number of tragic accidents happen each year. The tidal bores affect the shipping
and navigation in the estuarine zone, for example, in Papua New Guinea (Fly and Bamu
Rivers), Malaysia (Benak at
Batang Lupar), and India (Hoogly
bore).
On the other hand,
the tidal-bore affected estuaries are the rich feeding zones and breeding
grounds of several forms of wildlife. The
estuarine zones are the spawning and breeding grounds of several native fish
species, while the aeration induced by the tidal bore contribute to the
abundant growth of many species of fish and shrimps
60. Pelagic sediment or pelagite is fine-grained sediment that
accumulates as the result of the settling of particles to the floor of the open
ocean, far from land. These particles consist primarily of either the
microscopic, calcareous or siliceous shells of phytoplankton or zooplankton. Trace
amounts of meteoric dust and variable amounts of volcanic ash also occur within
pelagic sediments. Based upon the composition of the ooze, there are three main
types of pelagic sediments
ü
Calcareous oozes
ü
Red clays and
ü
Siliceous oozes
Calcareous ooze is ooze that is composed of at least 30% of
the calcareous microscopic shells—also known as tests—of
foraminifera, coccolithophores, and pteropods. This is the most common pelagic
sediment by area, covering 48% of the world ocean's floor. It accumulates more
rapidly than any other pelagic sediment type, with a rate that varies from
0.3–5 cm/1000 yr.
Red
clay, also known
as either brown clay or pelagic
clay, accumulates
in the deepest and most remote areas of the ocean. It covers 38% of the ocean
floor and accumulates more slowly than any other sediment type, at only
0.1-0.5 cm/1000 yr. Containing
less than 30% biogenic material, it consists of sediment that remains after the
dissolution of both calcareous and siliceous biogenic particles while they
settled through the water column. These sediments consist of eolian quartz, clay minerals, volcanic ash, subordinate
residue of siliceous microfossils,
and minerals such as zeolites,
limonite and manganese oxides. The bulk of red clay consists of eolian dust.
Accessory constituents found in red clay include meteorite dust, fish bones and
teeth, whale ear bones, and manganese
micro-nodules.
Siliceous ooze is ooze that is composed of at least 30% of
the siliceous microscopic "shells" of plankton, such as diatoms and radiolarian,
a group of round shaped zoo-plankton. Sometimes
siliceous oozes also contain silico-flagellates
and spicules of sponges. This type of ooze accumulates on the ocean
floor at depths below the carbonate compensation depth. Its distribution is
also limited to areas with high biological productivity, such as the polar
oceans, and upwelling zones near the equator. The least common type of
sediment, it covers only 15% of the ocean floor. It accumulates at a slower
rate than calcareous ooze: 0.2–1 cm/1000 year.
Hence, statements 1 and 3 are correct.
The calcareous ooze is not formed by diatoms as they make siliceous ooze.
*****
A detailed
note on the Law of the Sea and UNCLOS
Law of the Sea is the branch
of international law concerned
with public order at sea. Much of this law is codified in the United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), signed on Dec. 10, 1982. The convention,
described as a “constitution for the oceans,” represents an attempt to codify
international law regarding territorial
waters, sea-lanes, and ocean resources.
It came into force in 1994 after it had been ratified by the requisite 60
countries; by the early 21st century the convention had been ratified by more
than 150 countries.
Internal waters include waters on the landward side of
the baseline of a nation's territorial waters, except in archipelagic states. It includes
waterways such as rivers and canals and small bays.
As per UNCLOS the coastal nation is free to set Laws, regulate any Use,
and use any Resource. Foreign
vessels have no right of passage within internal waters, and this lack of right
to “innocent passage” is the key difference between internal
waters and territorial waters. According
to the 1982 convention, each country’s sovereign Territorial Waters extend
to a maximum of 12 nautical miles (22 km) beyond its coast, but foreign vessels
are granted the right of “innocent passage” through
this zone. Passage is innocent as long as a ship refrains from engaging in
certain prohibited activities like weapons-testing, spying, smuggling, pollution,
fishing,
or scientific research. Where territorial waters comprise straits used for
international navigation (e.g.,
the straits of Gibraltar, Mandeb, Hormuz,
and Malacca),
the navigational rights of foreign shipping are strengthened by the replacement
of the regime of “innocent passage” by one of “transit passage,” which places
fewer restrictions on foreign ships. A similar regime exists in major sea-lanes
through the waters of archipelagos (e.g., Indonesia) called Archipelagic Waters. Archipelagic
baseline can be delineated by joining the outermost points of the outermost
islands. Outside the Archipelagic/Territorial waters, the surface water is
called International Waters, different
from High Seas.
Beyond territorial waters, a coastal
country may establish Exclusive
Economic Zone (EEZ) extending 200 nautical miles (370 km)
from shore. Within EEZ the coastal state has the right to: 1. exploit and
regulate fisheries. 2. Construct artificial islands and installations. 3. Use
the zone for other economic purposes (e.g., energy generation from waves). 4.
Regulate scientific research by foreign vessels. Otherwise, foreign vessels (and aircraft) are
entitled to move freely through (and over) the EEZ.
Continental Shelf is defined as the natural prolongation of the land
territory to the continental margins’
outer edge, or 200 nautical miles (370 km) from the coastal state's
baseline, whichever is greater.). Legally, this area is known as
the continental shelf, though it differs
considerably from the geological definition of the continental shelf. In other words, UNCLOS states that the shelf extends to
the limit of the continental margins’,
but atleast 200 nautical miles from baseline. So inhabited volcanic islands
like the Canaries, having no actual continental shelf, nonetheless have a legal
continental shelf extending to 200 nautical miles out from the baseline,
whereas uninhabitable islands have no shelf.
Extended Continental Shelf: With
regard to the seabed beyond territorial waters, every coastal country has
exclusive rights to oil, gas, and other resources in the seabed of the legal
continental shelf, subject to an overall limit of:
o 350
nautical miles (650 km) from the coast OR
o 100
nautical miles (185 km) beyond the 2,500-metre isobath (a line connecting equal
point whichever combination of constraint lines the country chooses.
Thus
a coastal state's natural continental shelf may exceed 200 nautical miles (370 km)
until the prolongation ends. However, it may never exceed 350 nautical miles
(650 km) from baseline; or it may never exceed 100 nautical miles (190 km)
beyond the 2,500 m isobaths. Coastal
states have the right to harvest mineral and non-living material in the subsoil
of its continental shelf, to the exclusion of others. Coastal states also have
exclusive control over living resources "attached" to the continental
shelf, but not to creatures living in water column beyond EEZ.
[ See the diagram from net]
High Seas lie beyond the zones described
above. The waters and airspace of this area are open to use by all countries,
except for those activities prohibited by international law (e.g., the testing
of nuclear weapons). The bed of the high seas is known as the
International Seabed Area,
for which the 1982 convention established a separate legal regime which was
unacceptable to developed countries because of the regulation involved, and was
subsequently modified by a supplementary treaty (1994). Under the modified
regime the minerals on the ocean floor beneath the high seas are deemed “the
common heritage of mankind,” and their exploitation is administered by the
International Seabed Authority (ISA).
Any commercial exploration or mining of
the seabed is carried out by private or state concerns regulated and licensed
by the ISA, though thus far only exploration has been carried out. If or when
commercial mining begins, a global mining enterprise would be established and
afforded sites equal in size or value to those mined by private or state
companies. Fees and royalties from private and state mining concerns and any
profits made by the global enterprise would be distributed to developing
countries. Private mining companies are encouraged to sell their technology and
technical expertise to the global enterprise and to developing countries.
Where the territorial waters, EEZs,
or continental shelves of neighbouring countries overlap, a boundary line must
be drawn by agreement to achieve an equitable solution. Many such boundaries
have been agreed upon, but in some cases when the countries have been unable to
reach agreement the boundary has been determined by the International Court
of Justice (ICJ);
e.g., the boundary between Bahrain and Qatar) or by an arbitration tribunal
(e.g., the boundary between France and the United Kingdom). The most common
form of boundary is an equidistance line (sometimes modified to take account of
special circumstances) between the coasts concerned.
On many issues the 1982 convention contains precise and
detailed regulations (e.g., on innocent passage through territorial waters and
the definition of the continental shelf), but on other matters (e.g., safety of
shipping, pollution prevention,
and fisheries conservation and management) it merely provides a framework,
laying down broad principles but leaving the elaboration of rules to other treaties.
Regarding the safety of shipping, detailed provisions on the safety and
seaworthiness of ships, collision avoidance, and the qualification of crews are
contained in several treaties adopted under the auspices of the International
Maritime Organization (IMO), a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN).
The IMO also has adopted strict antipollution standards for ships. Pollution of
the sea from other sources is regulated by several regional treaties, most of
which have been adopted under the aegis of the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP). The broad standards for fisheries conservation in and
management of the EEZ (where most fishing takes place) laid out in the 1982
convention have been supplemented by nonbinding guidelines contained in the
Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries adopted in 1995 by the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO). Principles of management for high seas fishers are laid down
in the UN fish stocks treaty (1995), which manages straddling and highly
migratory fish stocks, and in detailed measures adopted by several regional
fisheries commissions.
Countries first attempt to settle any disputes stemming from
the 1982 convention and its provisions through negotiations or other
agreed-upon means of their choice (e.g., arbitration). If such efforts prove
unsuccessful, a country may, subject to some exceptions, refer the dispute for
compulsory settlement by the UN International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea
(located in Hamburg, Germany), by arbitration, or by the ICJ. Resort to these
compulsory procedures has been limited.
India’s
EEZ
With the adoption of the convention of the United Nations
Conference on the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS) by the early eighties, a new
International order of economic jurisdiction of 200 nautical miles (375 km) for
the coastal states was established. India thus obtained a wide exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) of about 2.172-million km2 in the sea all along
the 7500 km long coastline around her. The living and nonliving resources in
this zone, which measures about 66% of the landmass of the country, are
exclusive to India, so also the trading and transport facilities navigated
through this area. Moreover several million people living along the coastline
are directly influenced by oceanography of the EEZ, various environmental
hazards and related social issues.
*****
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