NCERT Solutions for Class 10 Social Science (Contemporary India II) Chapter 5: Minerals and Energy Resources (NCERT 2026–27)
These Class 10 Geography Chapter 5 solutions cover Minerals and Energy Resources from Contemporary India II, the Class 10 Social Science (Geography) textbook for the 2026–27 session. The chapter explains what a mineral is, the modes of occurrence of minerals, the distribution of ferrous, non-ferrous, non-metallic and rock minerals in India, the hazards of mining, the conservation of minerals, and India’s conventional and non-conventional energy resources. Below you get step-by-step answers to all NCERT Exercises (reproduced verbatim), plus key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions and FAQs to help you score full marks.
Class 10 Geography Chapter 5 – Overview
Chapter 5, Minerals and Energy Resources, shows that minerals are an indispensable part of our lives — almost everything we use, from a pin to a ship, is made from minerals. A mineral is a homogenous, naturally occurring substance with a definable internal structure, usually found in ores in igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary rocks, in placer and alluvial deposits and in ocean waters. The chapter studies the distribution of ferrous minerals (iron ore, manganese), non-ferrous minerals (copper, bauxite), non-metallic minerals (mica) and rock minerals (limestone), the major iron-ore belts, the hazards of mining, and the urgent need to conserve these finite, non-renewable resources. It then turns to energy resources — conventional sources (coal, petroleum, natural gas, electricity from hydel and thermal power) and non-conventional sources (nuclear, solar, wind, biogas, tidal and geothermal energy) — and stresses that “energy saved is energy produced.”
Key Terms & Concepts
Mineral: a homogenous, naturally occurring substance with a definable internal structure; minerals range from the hardest diamond to the softest talc.
Ore: an accumulation of any mineral mixed with other elements; the mineral content of the ore must be in sufficient concentration to make extraction commercially viable.
Veins and lodes: in igneous and metamorphic rocks, minerals occur in cracks, crevices, faults or joints — the smaller occurrences are veins and the larger are lodes (e.g. tin, copper, zinc, lead).
Placer deposits: minerals occurring as alluvial deposits in sands of valley floors and the base of hills, not corroded by water — gold, silver, tin and platinum.
Ferrous minerals: minerals containing iron — iron ore and manganese; they account for about three-fourths of the value of metallic mineral production.
Non-ferrous minerals: minerals that do not contain iron — copper, bauxite, lead, zinc and gold.
Magnetite & hematite: magnetite is the finest iron ore (up to 70% iron) with excellent magnetic qualities; hematite is the most important industrial iron ore (50–60% iron).
Conventional sources of energy: firewood, cattle dung cake, coal, petroleum, natural gas and electricity (hydel and thermal).
Non-conventional sources of energy: solar, wind, tidal, geothermal, biogas and atomic (nuclear) energy.
Conservation of minerals: using mineral resources in a planned, sustainable manner — using low-grade ores at low cost, recycling metals, using scrap and substitutes — because minerals are finite and non-renewable.
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) Which one of the following minerals is formed by decomposition of rocks, leaving a residual mass of weathered material? (a) coal (b) bauxite (c) gold (d) zinc
(ii) Koderma, in Jharkhand is the leading producer of which one of the following minerals? (a) bauxite (b) mica (c) iron ore (d) copper
(iii) Minerals are deposited and accumulated in the stratas of which of the following rocks? (a) sedimentary rocks (b) metamorphic rocks (c) igneous rocks (d) none of the above
(iv) Which one of the following minerals is contained in the Monazite sand? (a) oil (b) uranium (c) thorium (d) coal
2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.
(i) Distinguish between the following in not more than 30 words. (a) ferrous and non-ferrous minerals (b) conventional and non-conventional sources of energy
(ii) What is a mineral?
(iii) How are minerals formed in igneous and metamorphic rocks?
(iv) Why do we need to conserve mineral resources?
3. Answer the following questions in about 120 words.
(i) Describe the distribution of coal in India.
(ii) Why do you think that solar energy has a bright future in India?
Note: The chapter also includes an Activity (a crossword to fill in the names of minerals). The answers across are: 1. Manganese, 2. Limestone, 3. Magnetite, 4. Anthracite, 5. Bauxite, 6. Copper, 7. Potash; and down are: 1. Gold, 2. Hematite, 3. Mica, 4. Tertiary, 5. Tin. These are solved here for completeness and need not be reproduced in an exam answer.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. What is an ore?
Q2. Why is magnetite considered the finest iron ore?
Q3. Name the major petroleum production areas in India.
Q4. What is rat-hole mining?
Q5. State two hazards of mining.
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Describe the major iron-ore belts of India.
Q2. Distinguish between conventional and non-conventional sources of energy, giving examples of each.
Q3. How can mineral resources be conserved? Why is conservation necessary?
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Which iron ore has the highest iron content (up to 70%)?
(a) Hematite (b) Magnetite (c) Limonite (d) Siderite
2. Gold, silver, tin and platinum are most important among which type of deposits?
(a) veins (b) lodes (c) placer deposits (d) sedimentary beds
3. The Bailadila range, famous for super high-grade iron ore, lies in:
(a) Odisha (b) Karnataka (c) Chhattisgarh (d) Goa
4. Approximately how much manganese is required to manufacture one tonne of steel?
(a) 1 kg (b) 10 kg (c) 100 kg (d) 50 kg
5. The Khetri mines of Rajasthan are famous for which mineral?
(a) bauxite (b) mica (c) copper (d) iron ore
6. Which of the following is the basic raw material for the cement industry?
(a) mica (b) limestone (c) bauxite (d) manganese
7. The principal lignite reserves used to generate electricity are located at:
(a) Jharia (b) Raniganj (c) Neyveli (d) Bokaro
8. The largest wind farm cluster in India stretches from Nagarcoil to:
(a) Madurai (b) Chennai (c) Jaisalmer (d) Mangaluru
9. Which is the highest quality hard coal?
(a) peat (b) lignite (c) bituminous (d) anthracite
10. The Panchpatmali deposits in Koraput district are important deposits of which mineral?
(a) copper (b) bauxite (c) iron ore (d) mica
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: Mineral resources are finite and non-renewable.
Reason: Minerals took millions of years to form and their rate of replenishment is infinitely small compared to the rate of consumption.
A-R 2. Assertion: Heavy industries and thermal power stations are located near coalfields.
Reason: Coal is a bulky material that loses weight on use as it is reduced to ash.
A-R 3. Assertion: Solar energy has a bright future in India.
Reason: India is a tropical country with enormous possibilities of tapping solar energy.
A-R 4. Assertion: Bauxite is formed in igneous rocks through cooling of magma.
Reason: Bauxite is formed by the decomposition of rocks rich in aluminium silicates, leaving a residual mass of weathered material.
A-R 5. Assertion: Non-conventional sources of energy are being promoted in India.
Reason: Fossil fuels are running out and their use causes serious environmental problems.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Memorise the modes of occurrence of minerals (veins/lodes, beds/strata, decomposition, placer deposits, ocean waters) with one example each. Learn the four iron-ore belts and their states and ports, and the leading producers of copper, bauxite, mica and limestone. For energy, be clear on the conventional vs non-conventional classification, the two geological ages and locations of coal, and the petroleum/natural gas areas (Mumbai High, Gujarat, Assam, KG basin). Use exact place names — Kudremukh, Bailadila, Khetri, Balaghat, Koderma, Neyveli, Nagarcoil — to show you have studied the chapter, and always link conservation to minerals being finite and non-renewable.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Confusing magnetite (finest, up to 70% iron, magnetic) with hematite (most used industrially, 50–60% iron).
- Calling bauxite an igneous mineral — it forms by decomposition of aluminium-rich rocks (weathering).
- Mixing up ferrous (iron ore, manganese) with non-ferrous (copper, bauxite, lead, zinc, gold) minerals.
- Placing the Bailadila range in Karnataka — it is in the Bastar district of Chhattisgarh.
- Listing nuclear/atomic energy as conventional — it is a non-conventional source.
- Forgetting that Gondwana coal is older (200+ million years) and metallurgical, while tertiary coal (55 million years) is found in the north-east.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Chapter 5 of Class 10 Geography (Contemporary India II) about?
Chapter 5, Minerals and Energy Resources, explains what a mineral is and its modes of occurrence, the distribution of ferrous, non-ferrous, non-metallic and rock minerals in India, the hazards of mining, the conservation of minerals, and India’s conventional and non-conventional energy resources.
What is the difference between ferrous and non-ferrous minerals?
Ferrous minerals contain iron and form the base of metallurgical industries, such as iron ore and manganese. Non-ferrous minerals do not contain iron and include copper, bauxite, lead, zinc and gold, which are used in metallurgical, engineering and electrical industries.
How many exercise questions are there in Class 10 Geography Chapter 5?
The end-of-chapter Exercises contain a set of 4 multiple choice questions, four 30-word questions (Q2) and two 120-word questions (Q3), plus an Activity (crossword). All are solved step by step on this page.
