NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Geography Chapter 13: Movements of Ocean Water (NCERT 2026–27)
These Class 11 Geography Chapter 13 solutions cover Movements of Ocean Water from Fundamentals of Physical Geography, the NCERT textbook for the 2026–27 session. The chapter explains the three great movements of sea water — waves, tides and ocean currents — their characteristics, the forces that cause them, the different types of tides and currents, and the effects of ocean currents on climate and fishing. Below you get step-by-step answers to every NCERT exercise question reproduced verbatim, plus key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions and FAQs.
Class 11 Geography Chapter 13 – Overview
Chapter 13, Movements of Ocean Water, shows that ocean water is dynamic, with movements driven by its physical characteristics (temperature, salinity, density) and by external forces (the sun, the moon and the winds). These movements are of two kinds: horizontal motion — the ocean currents and waves — and vertical motion — the tides and the upwelling and sinking of water. Waves are energy (not water) moving across the surface, caused mainly by wind; their crest, trough, height, period, wavelength and speed describe them. Tides are the periodical rise and fall of sea level caused by the gravitational pull of the moon and the sun together with the centrifugal force, producing two tidal bulges; they are classified by frequency (semi-diurnal, diurnal, mixed) and by the sun–moon–earth position (spring and neap tides). Ocean currents are the regular flow of water in a definite direction, driven by primary forces (solar heating, wind, gravity, the Coriolis force) and secondary forces (density and gravity differences); they are classed as surface/deep and as warm/cold, and they strongly influence coastal climate, fog and the world’s best fishing grounds.
Key Terms & Concepts
Waves: the horizontal motion of water in which energy — not the water itself — moves across the ocean surface; water particles travel only in small circles as a wave passes.
Crest and trough: the highest and lowest points of a wave respectively. Wave height is the vertical distance from the bottom of a trough to the top of a crest; wave amplitude is one-half of the wave height.
Wave period: the time interval between two successive crests (or troughs) passing a fixed point. Wavelength is the horizontal distance between two successive crests. Wave speed (measured in knots) is the rate at which a wave moves through the water; wave frequency is the number of waves passing a point in one second.
Tides: the periodical rise and fall of the sea level, once or twice a day, mainly due to the gravitational attraction of the moon and (to a lesser extent) the sun, together with centrifugal force.
Surges: movements of water caused by meteorological effects (winds and atmospheric-pressure changes); unlike tides, surges are not regular.
Tidal bulge & tide-generating force: the gravitational pull and the centrifugal force together create two tidal bulges — one facing the moon, one on the opposite side. The ‘tide-generating’ force is the difference between the moon’s gravitational attraction and the centrifugal force.
Types by frequency: semi-diurnal (two high and two low tides daily, of nearly equal height), diurnal (one high and one low tide each day), and mixed (tides of varying height).
Spring and neap tides: spring tides occur when the sun, moon and earth are in a straight line (full moon and new moon), giving the highest tides; neap tides occur when the sun and moon are at right angles, giving lower tides, about seven days after spring tides.
Perigee/apogee and perihelion/aphelion: tidal ranges are greatest when the moon is nearest the earth (perigee) and when the earth is nearest the sun (perihelion, around 3 January), and least at apogee and aphelion (around 4 July).
Ebb and flow (flood): the falling water between high and low tide is the ebb; the rising water between low and high tide is the flow or flood.
Ocean currents: the regular, definite flow of a volume of water along a path and direction. Driven by primary forces (solar heating, wind, gravity, the Coriolis force) and secondary forces (density and gravity differences). Large circular currents are called gyres; current speed is called its drift.
Warm and cold currents: warm currents carry warm water into cold areas (mostly along east coasts of continents in low/middle latitudes); cold currents carry cold water into warm areas (mostly along west coasts in low/middle latitudes).
NCERT Exercises — Full Solutions
All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Exercises. Answers are original, written in exam-ready style.
1. Multiple choice questions
(i) Upward and downward movement of ocean water is known as the: (a) tide (b) current (c) wave (d) none of the above
(ii) Spring tides are caused: (a) As result of the moon and the sun pulling the earth gravitationally in the same direction. (b) As result of the moon and the sun pulling the earth gravitationally in the opposite direction. (c) Indention in the coast line. (d) None of the above.
(iii) The distance between the earth and the moon is minimum when the moon is in: (a) Aphelion (b) Perigee (c) Perihelion (d) Apogee
(iv) The earth reaches its perihelion in: (a) October (b) September (c) July (d) January
2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.
(i) What are waves?
(ii) Where do waves in the ocean get their energy from?
(iii) What are tides?
(iv) How are tides caused?
(v) How are tides related to navigation?
3. Answer the following questions in about 150 words.
(i) How do currents affect the temperature? How does it affect the temperature of coastal areas in the N. W. Europe?
(ii) What are the causes of currents?
Project Work
(i) Visit a lake or a pond and observe the movement of waves. Throw a stone and notice how waves are generated.
(ii) Take a globe and a map showing the currents of the oceans. Discuss why certain currents are warm or cold and why they deflect in certain places and examine the reasons.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. Distinguish between waves and currents.
Q2. What are surges, and how do they differ from tides?
Q3. Name and define the three types of tides based on frequency.
Q4. Differentiate between spring tides and neap tides.
Q5. State two ways in which tides are useful to people.
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Describe the chief characteristics of a wave.
Q2. Explain how the gravitational pull and the centrifugal force together create tides.
Q3. Discuss the effects of ocean currents on human life and climate.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. In a wave, what actually moves across the ocean surface?
(a) the water itself (b) energy (c) salt (d) the sea floor
2. One-half of the wave height is called the:
(a) wavelength (b) wave period (c) wave amplitude (d) wave frequency
3. Horizontal motion of ocean water includes:
(a) tides only (b) waves and currents (c) upwelling (d) sinking of surface water
4. The most common tidal pattern, with two high and two low tides each day, is the:
(a) diurnal tide (b) mixed tide (c) semi-diurnal tide (d) spring tide
5. Neap tides occur when the sun and the moon are:
(a) in a straight line (b) at right angles to each other (c) at perigee (d) at perihelion
6. The world’s highest tides (15–16 m) occur in the:
(a) Bay of Bengal (b) Bay of Fundy (c) Gulf of Mexico (d) Persian Gulf
7. Which of the following is a primary force that initiates ocean currents?
(a) density difference (b) salinity difference (c) the Coriolis force (d) all of the above
8. Large circular accumulations of water and the flow around them are called:
(a) surges (b) gyres (c) drifts (d) bulges
9. Surface currents make up about what percentage of all the water in the ocean?
(a) 10 per cent (b) 40 per cent (c) 70 per cent (d) 90 per cent
10. The falling water level between high tide and low tide is called the:
(a) flood (b) flow (c) ebb (d) surge
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: In a wave the water does not move forward with the wave.
Reason: A wave is the movement of energy across the surface, while water particles only travel in small circles.
A-R 2. Assertion: Spring tides are higher than neap tides.
Reason: At spring tides the sun, moon and earth are in a straight line and their gravitational pulls combine.
A-R 3. Assertion: Tides can be predicted accurately well in advance.
Reason: Tides are caused by the earth–moon–sun positions, which are known accurately.
A-R 4. Assertion: Warm currents are usually found along the west coasts of continents in low and middle latitudes.
Reason: The Coriolis force deflects moving water to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere.
A-R 5. Assertion: The best fishing grounds of the world lie where warm and cold currents meet.
Reason: The mixing of warm and cold currents replenishes oxygen and favours the growth of plankton.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Keep the big classification clear: ocean water moves by horizontal motion (waves and currents) and vertical motion (tides). Memorise the seven wave characteristics (crest, trough, height, amplitude, period, wavelength, speed, frequency) and the two tide classifications (by frequency: semi-diurnal, diurnal, mixed; by sun–moon position: spring, neap). For tide diagrams, always mention the two bulges and the balance of gravitational and centrifugal forces. For currents, learn the four primary forces and link warm/cold currents to coastal climate (north-west Europe = North Atlantic Drift). Use textbook examples — Bay of Fundy, Durgaduani tidal power, perigee/perihelion — to show depth.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Saying the water moves forward in a wave — it is the energy that moves; water particles move in small circles.
- Confusing spring tides (straight line, highest) with neap tides (right angles, lowest).
- Mixing up perigee/apogee (moon–earth distance) with perihelion/aphelion (earth–sun distance).
- Forgetting that warm currents mostly border east coasts and cold currents west coasts in low/middle latitudes.
- Writing only gravitational force for tides — always include the centrifugal force and the two bulges.
- Confusing ebb (falling water) with flow/flood (rising water).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Chapter 13 of Class 11 Geography about?
Chapter 13, Movements of Ocean Water, deals with the three movements of sea water — waves, tides and ocean currents. It explains their characteristics, the forces (wind, gravity, the moon and sun, and the Coriolis force) that cause them, the types of tides and currents, and the effects of currents on climate and fishing.
What is the difference between spring tides and neap tides?
Spring tides occur when the sun, moon and earth are in a straight line (at full moon and new moon), so their gravitational pulls combine to give the highest tides. Neap tides occur when the sun and moon are at right angles, so their forces partly cancel, giving lower tides about seven days after the spring tides.
How do ocean currents affect the climate of north-west Europe?
The warm North Atlantic Drift (an extension of the Gulf Stream) flows along north-west Europe, carrying warm water from lower latitudes polewards. This keeps the coasts of Britain and Norway much warmer than their latitude would suggest, gives mild winters, a marine climate and ice-free ports in winter.
