NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Geography Chapter 4: Distribution of Oceans and Continents

These Class 11 Geography Chapter 4 solutions cover Distribution of Oceans and Continents from Fundamentals of Physical Geography, the NCERT textbook continued for the 2026–27 session. The chapter traces how scientists explained the changing positions of the continents and oceans — from Alfred Wegener’s Continental Drift theory and its evidence (jig-saw fit, matching rocks, tillite, placer deposits and fossils), through the post-drift discoveries of ocean-floor mapping and palaeomagnetism, to the Sea Floor Spreading hypothesis of Hess and the modern theory of Plate Tectonics, ending with the journey of the Indian plate. Below you get step-by-step answers to every NCERT exercise question, plus extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions and FAQs.

Class: 11 Subject: Geography Book: Fundamentals of Physical Geography Chapter: 4 Topic: Distribution of Oceans and Continents Session: 2026–27

Class 11 Geography Chapter 4 – Overview

Chapter 4 explains that the present positions of the continents and oceans are not permanent — they have changed in the geological past and continue to change. In 1912 Alfred Wegener proposed the Continental Drift theory, suggesting that all continents once formed a single super-continent, Pangaea, surrounded by a mega-ocean called Panthalassa. About 200 million years ago Pangaea broke into Laurasia (north) and Gondwanaland (south), which split further into today’s continents. Evidence such as the jig-saw fit of coastlines, matching rocks across oceans, tillite, placer deposits and the distribution of fossils supported drift, although the forces Wegener suggested (pole-fleeing and tidal force) were rejected. Later, ocean-floor mapping and palaeomagnetic studies led Hess (1961) to the Sea Floor Spreading hypothesis, and in 1967 the unified theory of Plate Tectonics showed that it is not continents but rigid lithospheric plates (seven major and several minor) that move over the asthenosphere, driven by mantle convection currents. The chapter ends with the northward journey of the Indian plate and the formation of the Himalayas.

Key Terms & Concepts

Continental Drift: Wegener’s 1912 theory that the continents have drifted across the surface of the earth from a single super-continent to their present positions.

Pangaea & Panthalassa: the single super-continent (‘all earth’) and the surrounding mega-ocean (‘all water’) of about 200 million years ago.

Laurasia & Gondwanaland: the two large masses into which Pangaea first split — the northern and southern components respectively.

Jig-saw fit: the remarkable match of the facing shorelines of South America and Africa, confirmed by Bullard (1964) at the 1,000-fathom line.

Tillite: sedimentary rock formed from glacial deposits; the Gondwana tillite of India has counterparts in Africa, Falkland Island, Madagascar, Antarctica and Australia, proving the masses were once joined.

Placer deposits: rich gold deposits on the Ghana coast whose source rock lies in Brazil, showing the two continents once lay side by side.

Pole-fleeing & tidal force: the forces Wegener suggested for drift — the first linked to the earth’s rotation and equatorial bulge, the second to the attraction of the moon and the sun; both were judged inadequate.

Convection currents: currents in the mantle generated by heat from radioactive decay; proposed by Arthur Holmes (1930s) as the force behind movement.

Sea Floor Spreading: Hess’s 1961 hypothesis that constant eruptions at mid-oceanic ridges create new crust that pushes the ocean floor outwards, which is later consumed at the trenches.

Mid-oceanic ridge: the interconnected, submerged chain of mountains with a central rift — the longest mountain chain on earth and a zone of intense volcanic activity.

Plate Tectonics: the 1967 theory (McKenzie & Parker; Morgan) that the lithosphere is divided into seven major and several minor rigid plates that move over the asthenosphere.

Plate boundaries: divergent (new crust generated, e.g. Mid-Atlantic Ridge), convergent (crust destroyed at a subduction zone) and transform (crust neither created nor destroyed as plates slide past each other).

Rates of plate movement: determined from magnetic strips parallel to ridges — from less than 2.5 cm/yr (Arctic Ridge) to over 15 cm/yr (East Pacific Rise).

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) Who amongst the following was the first to consider the possibility of Europe, Africa and America having been located side by side. (a) Alfred Wegener    (b) Antonio Pellegrini    (c) Abraham Ortelius    (d) Edmond Hess

ANSWER (c) Abraham Ortelius. The Dutch map maker Abraham Ortelius was the first to propose, as early as 1596, the possibility that the Americas, Europe and Africa had once been joined together.

(ii) Polar fleeing force relates to: (a) Revolution of the Earth    (b) Gravitation    (c) Rotation of the earth    (d) Tides

ANSWER (c) Rotation of the earth. The pole-fleeing force is related to the rotation of the earth, which gives the earth its equatorial bulge.

(iii) Which one of the following is not a minor plate? (a) Nazca    (b) Arabia    (c) Philippines    (d) Antarctica

ANSWER (d) Antarctica. The Antarctic (Antarctica and the surrounding oceanic) plate is one of the seven major plates. Nazca, Arabia and the Philippine plate are minor plates.

(iv) Which one of the following facts was not considered by those while discussing the concept of sea floor spreading? (a) Volcanic activity along the mid-oceanic ridges. (b) Stripes of normal and reverse magnetic field observed in rocks of ocean floor. (c) Distribution of fossils in different continents. (d) Age of rocks from the ocean floor.

ANSWER (c) Distribution of fossils in different continents. The distribution of fossils was evidence for continental drift, not for sea floor spreading. Sea floor spreading rested on volcanic activity along ridges, magnetic stripes and the age of ocean-floor rocks.

(v) Which one of the following is the type of plate boundary of the Indian plate along the Himalayan mountains? (a) Ocean-continent convergence (b) Divergent boundary (c) Transform boundary (d) Continent-continent convergence

ANSWER (d) Continent-continent convergence. Along the Himalayas the Indian plate meets the Eurasian plate, both carrying continental crust, forming a continent–continent convergent boundary that uplifted the Himalayas.

2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.

(i) What were the forces suggested by Wegener for the movement of the continents?

ANSWER Wegener suggested two forces — the pole-fleeing force, related to the rotation of the earth and its equatorial bulge, and the tidal force, caused by the attraction of the moon and the sun. Both were later judged inadequate.

(ii) How are the convectional currents in the mantle initiated and maintained?

ANSWER Convection currents in the mantle are initiated by thermal differences caused by radioactive elements within the mantle. Heated material rises, spreads, cools and sinks, and this cycle, repeated continuously, maintains the convective flow.

(iii) What is the major difference between the transform boundary and the convergent or divergent boundaries of plates?

ANSWER At a transform boundary crust is neither created nor destroyed as plates slide horizontally past each other. At a divergent boundary new crust is generated, and at a convergent boundary crust is destroyed by subduction.

(iv) What was the location of the Indian landmass during the formation of the Deccan Traps?

ANSWER During the outpouring of lava that formed the Deccan Traps — beginning about 60 million years ago — the Indian subcontinent was still moving northward towards Eurasia and was located close to the equator.

3. Answer the following questions in about 150 words.

(i) What are the evidences in support of the continental drift theory?

ANSWER Wegener offered several lines of evidence for continental drift: 1. Matching of continents (Jig-Saw-Fit): the facing shorelines of South America and Africa fit together remarkably well; a computer-generated best fit by Bullard (1964) at the 1,000-fathom line was almost perfect. 2. Rocks of same age across the oceans: radiometric dating shows that the belt of 2,000-million-year-old rocks of the Brazil coast matches those of western Africa, and the earliest marine deposits on both coasts are of the Jurassic age. 3. Tillite: the glacial tillite of the Gondwana system in India has counterparts in Africa, Falkland Island, Madagascar, Antarctica and Australia, proving these masses once had a common history. 4. Placer deposits: rich gold deposits on the Ghana coast, with no source rock there, are derived from the Brazil plateau, showing the two continents once lay side by side. 5. Distribution of fossils: identical species such as Mesosaurus, found only in South Africa and Brazil (now 4,800 km apart), and the spread of Lemurs across India, Madagascar and Africa, point to once-connected landmasses.

(ii) Bring about the basic difference between the drift theory and Plate tectonics.

ANSWER The basic difference lies in what actually moves and the force responsible. In Wegener’s continental drift theory, the continents themselves were thought to move, ploughing through the ocean floor. Wegener believed the continents had once formed a single super-continent, Pangaea, and the forces he proposed — the pole-fleeing and tidal forces — were too weak and were rejected by other scientists. In plate tectonics, it is not the continent but the lithospheric plate that moves. Continents are merely part of these rigid plates, which glide over the asthenosphere as units. The theory explains the driving force as mantle convection currents, and it shows that Pangaea was itself the result of converging continental masses. Plate tectonics is thus a more complete, mechanically sound and widely accepted explanation, supported by sea floor spreading and palaeomagnetic data.

(iii) What were the major post-drift discoveries that rejuvenated the interest of scientists in the study of distribution of oceans and continents?

ANSWER After World War II, several discoveries revived scientific interest: 1. Mapping of the ocean floor: expeditions revealed that the ocean floor is not a flat plain but full of relief — submerged mid-oceanic ridges, deep trenches near continental margins and abyssal plains. 2. Young oceanic rocks: dating showed that rocks of the oceanic crust are much younger (nowhere older than 200 million years) than continental rocks, and that volcanic eruptions along the ridges are common. 3. Palaeomagnetic studies: rocks equidistant on either side of a ridge crest show striking similarities in age, chemical composition and magnetic properties, with stripes of normal and reverse polarity. 4. Thin sediments and earthquake patterns: ocean-floor sediments were unexpectedly thin, and earthquakes were shallow near ridges but deep at trenches. These facts led Hess (1961) to the sea floor spreading hypothesis, which in turn paved the way for the unified theory of plate tectonics (1967).

Project Work

Prepare a collage related to damages caused by an earthquake.

ANSWER (GUIDANCE) This is a hands-on project, so prepare your own collage; the following is a guide. Take a chart sheet and arrange newspaper cuttings, printed photographs and your own sketches that show earthquake damage — collapsed buildings and bridges, cracked roads and railway tracks, landslides, fires from broken gas lines, tsunamis triggered by undersea quakes, and rescue and relief operations. Group the images under headings such as ‘Damage to property’, ‘Loss of life’, ‘Secondary disasters (fire, landslide, tsunami)’ and ‘Relief and rehabilitation’. Add short captions and, if possible, refer to a real Indian event such as the 2001 Bhuj earthquake or the 2015 Nepal earthquake. Write a one-line title at the top and a short note on how such damage can be reduced through earthquake-resistant construction and preparedness.

Extra Practice Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. What were Pangaea and Panthalassa?

ANSWERAccording to Wegener, Pangaea was the single super-continent (‘all earth’) into which all continents were once joined, and Panthalassa was the mega-ocean (‘all water’) that surrounded it about 200 million years ago.

Q2. What is tillite and why is it important evidence for continental drift?

ANSWERTillite is sedimentary rock formed from the deposits of glaciers. The Gondwana tillite of India has counterparts in Africa, Falkland Island, Madagascar, Antarctica and Australia, proving that these landmasses once had a common glacial history and were joined together.

Q3. Name the three major divisions of the ocean floor.

ANSWERBased on depth and relief, the ocean floor is divided into three major divisions: the continental margins, the deep-sea basins (abyssal plains) and the mid-oceanic ridges.

Q4. What is the ‘rim of fire’?

ANSWERThe rim of the Pacific Ocean is called the ‘rim of fire’ because it has a large concentration of active volcanoes and frequent, deep-seated earthquakes, coinciding with the boundaries of the Pacific plate.

Q5. How do scientists determine the rate of plate movement?

ANSWERScientists use the strips of normal and reverse magnetic field that run parallel to the mid-oceanic ridges. By dating these magnetic stripes they calculate how fast plates move — from less than 2.5 cm/yr (Arctic Ridge) to more than 15 cm/yr (East Pacific Rise).

Long Answer Type Questions

Q1. Explain the concept of Sea Floor Spreading as proposed by Hess.

ANSWERThe detailed mapping of the ocean floor and palaeomagnetic studies revealed several facts: volcanic eruptions are common along mid-oceanic ridges; rocks equidistant from a ridge crest are similar in age, chemistry and magnetism, with the youngest rocks at the crest and older rocks farther away; oceanic rocks are nowhere older than 200 million years; ocean-floor sediments are unexpectedly thin; and earthquakes are shallow near ridges but deep at trenches. On this basis, Hess (1961) proposed the hypothesis of sea floor spreading. He argued that constant eruptions at the crest of oceanic ridges rupture the oceanic crust and new lava wedges in, pushing the ocean floor outwards on both sides — so the floor spreads. Since one ocean spreading does not shrink another, and oceanic crust is young, Hess reasoned that the older floor sinks and is consumed at the deep-sea trenches. This idea later became a key support for plate tectonics.

Q2. Describe the three types of plate boundaries with examples.

ANSWERPlate tectonics recognises three types of boundaries based on plate motion. Divergent (constructive) boundaries are where plates pull apart and new crust is generated; these spreading sites are best seen at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, where the American plates separate from the Eurasian and African plates. Convergent (destructive) boundaries are where crust is destroyed as one plate dives beneath another at a subduction zone; convergence may occur between an oceanic and a continental plate, between two oceanic plates, or between two continental plates (as along the Himalayas). Transform (conservative) boundaries are where crust is neither created nor destroyed because plates slide horizontally past each other along transform faults, which usually lie perpendicular to the mid-oceanic ridges. Together, these boundaries explain the generation, destruction and movement of the lithospheric plates and the distribution of earthquakes, volcanoes and mountain belts.

Q3. Trace the movement of the Indian plate and the formation of the Himalayas.

ANSWERThe Indian plate includes Peninsular India and the Australian continental portions. About 225 million years ago, India was a large island off the Australian coast, separated from the Asian continent by the Tethys Sea. When Pangaea broke, India began its northward journey about 200 million years ago. Around 140 million years before present it lay as far south as 50°S latitude. As it drifted north towards the Eurasian plate, the outpouring of lava formed the Deccan Traps, starting about 60 million years ago, when the subcontinent was still near the equator. India finally collided with Asia about 40–50 million years ago, in a continent–continent convergence. This collision caused the rapid uplift of the Himalayas from the sediments of the Tethys Sea. The northern boundary of the Indian plate is the subduction zone along the Himalayas. Scientists believe the process is still continuing, and the Himalayas are still rising today.

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. The single super-continent of Wegener’s theory was named:

(a) Laurasia    (b) Pangaea    (c) Gondwanaland    (d) Panthalassa

2. The mega-ocean that surrounded the super-continent was called:

(a) Tethys    (b) Panthalassa    (c) Atlantic    (d) Pacific

3. Pangaea first split into two masses named:

(a) Africa and Asia    (b) Laurasia and Gondwanaland    (c) Eurasia and India    (d) Nazca and Cocos

4. The best-fit match of the Atlantic margins at the 1,000-fathom line was presented in 1964 by:

(a) Wegener    (b) Holmes    (c) Bullard    (d) Hess

5. The reptile fossil found only in South Africa and Brazil, supporting drift, is:

(a) Lemur    (b) Mesosaurus    (c) Tillite    (d) Dinosaur

6. Convection currents in the mantle as a force for movement were first discussed in the 1930s by:

(a) Arthur Holmes    (b) Harry Hess    (c) Morgan    (d) McKenzie

7. The hypothesis of sea floor spreading was proposed by Hess in:

(a) 1912    (b) 1930    (c) 1961    (d) 1967

8. The age of the rocks of the oceanic crust is nowhere more than:

(a) 100 million years    (b) 200 million years    (c) 1,000 million years    (d) 3,200 million years

9. The best-known example of a divergent plate boundary is the:

(a) Java Trench    (b) Himalayas    (c) Mid-Atlantic Ridge    (d) San Andreas Fault

10. India is supposed to have started its northward journey about:

(a) 40 million years ago    (b) 71 million years ago    (c) 140 million years ago    (d) 200 million years ago

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(b), 3-(b), 4-(c), 5-(b), 6-(a), 7-(c), 8-(b), 9-(c), 10-(d).

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: The oceanic crust is younger than the continental crust.

Reason: New oceanic crust is constantly created at the mid-oceanic ridges and the older crust is consumed at the trenches.

A-R 2. Assertion: The forces suggested by Wegener for continental drift were widely accepted by scientists.

Reason: The pole-fleeing and tidal forces were strong enough to move the continents.

A-R 3. Assertion: In plate tectonics it is the plate, not the continent alone, that moves.

Reason: Continents are part of the rigid lithospheric plates that glide over the asthenosphere.

A-R 4. Assertion: The Himalayas were formed by a continent–continent convergence.

Reason: The Indian plate collided with the Eurasian plate, both carrying continental crust.

A-R 5. Assertion: At a transform boundary the crust is destroyed by subduction.

Reason: Transform faults lie perpendicular to the mid-oceanic ridges.

Answer key: 1-(A), 2-(D), 3-(A), 4-(A), 5-(D).

Exam Tips & Common Mistakes

How to score full marks in this chapter

Remember the chronology of names and years — Ortelius (1596), Wegener’s drift theory (1912), Holmes’ convection currents (1930s), Hess’ sea floor spreading (1961), and plate tectonics by McKenzie & Parker and Morgan (1967). For the ‘evidence of drift’ question, give all five points with examples (jig-saw fit, matching rocks, tillite, placer deposits, fossils). Clearly distinguish the three plate boundaries with one example each, and learn the seven major plates. For the Indian plate, link the dates 200 (drift begins), 60 (Deccan Traps) and 40–50 million years (collision and Himalayas).

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Mixing up Pangaea (the land) with Panthalassa (the ocean), and Laurasia (north) with Gondwanaland (south).
  • Saying continents move in plate tectonics — it is the plate that moves; continents merely ride on it.
  • Listing the distribution of fossils as evidence for sea floor spreading — it is evidence for continental drift.
  • Confusing the pole-fleeing force (rotation) with the tidal force (moon and sun).
  • Calling Antarctica a minor plate — it is one of the seven major plates.
  • Confusing a divergent boundary (new crust) with a convergent one (crust destroyed) and a transform one (crust neither made nor destroyed).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Chapter 4 of Class 11 Geography about?

Chapter 4, Distribution of Oceans and Continents, explains how the positions of continents and oceans have changed over geological time — from Wegener’s Continental Drift theory and its evidence, through ocean-floor mapping and the Sea Floor Spreading hypothesis of Hess, to the modern theory of Plate Tectonics and the journey of the Indian plate.

What is the difference between continental drift and plate tectonics?

In continental drift, Wegener believed the continents themselves moved, driven by weak pole-fleeing and tidal forces. In plate tectonics, it is the rigid lithospheric plates that move over the asthenosphere, carrying the continents, and the driving force is mantle convection currents. Plate tectonics is the more complete and accepted theory.

How many plate boundaries are there and what are they?

There are three types of plate boundaries: divergent (new crust generated, e.g. Mid-Atlantic Ridge), convergent (crust destroyed at a subduction zone, e.g. the Himalayas) and transform (crust neither created nor destroyed as plates slide past each other).

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