NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Geography Chapter 1: Human Geography – Nature and Scope (NCERT 2026–27)

These Class 12 Geography Chapter 1 solutions cover Human Geography: Nature and Scope, the opening chapter of Fundamentals of Human Geography, updated for the 2026–27 session. The chapter defines human geography, traces how human beings and Nature interact through technology, and explains the three guiding schools of human–environment thought — environmental determinism, possibilism and neo-determinism (stop-and-go determinism). It also surveys the historical development of the discipline and its many fields and sub-fields. Below you get every NCERT exercise question answered step by step, key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason and FAQs.

Class: 12 Subject: Geography Book: Fundamentals of Human Geography Chapter: 1 Chapter Name: Human Geography: Nature and Scope Session: 2026–27

Class 12 Geography Chapter 1 – Overview

Chapter 1, Human Geography: Nature and Scope, introduces human geography as the synthetic study of the relationship between human societies and the earth’s surface. Geography has two major components — Nature (the physical environment) and life forms including human beings — and the chapter stresses that the old dualism between physical and human geography is not valid, because nature and human beings are inseparable and must be seen holistically. Human beings interact with their environment with the help of technology, which mirrors the level of cultural development of a society. Three approaches explain this relationship: environmental determinism (Nature dictates, the ‘naturalised human’), possibilism (humans create possibilities and humanise Nature), and Griffith Taylor’s middle path neo-determinism or stop-and-go determinism. The chapter then traces the historical development of human geography from the early colonial period to post-modernism, lists the welfare, radical and behavioural schools of thought, and maps the fields and sub-fields of human geography along with their interface with sister disciplines of the social sciences.

Key Concepts & Terms

Human geography: the synthetic study of the relationship between human societies and the earth’s surface (Ratzel). It studies the inter-relationship between the physical environment and the socio-cultural environment created by human beings through mutual interaction.

Dualism & holism: geography was historically split into physical vs human (dualism) and into nomothetic (law-making) vs idiographic (descriptive), and regional vs systematic approaches. The chapter argues nature and human are inseparable, so geography should be studied holistically.

Naturalisation of humans: in early stages of low technology, humans adapted to the dictates of Nature, feared and worshipped it — producing a ‘naturalised human’. This direct dependence on ‘Mother Nature’ is termed environmental determinism.

Humanisation of Nature: as societies develop better technology, they move from a state of necessity to a state of freedom, creating possibilities and a cultural landscape. Nature gets humanised, bearing the imprints of human endeavour — this is possibilism.

Neo-determinism (stop-and-go determinism): Griffith Taylor’s middle path (Madhyam Marg) between determinism and possibilism. Like traffic lights, it means human beings can conquer Nature by obeying it — possibilities can be created within limits that do not damage the environment.

Technology: the tools and techniques with which humans interact with their environment; it indicates the level of cultural development and loosens the shackles of the environment on human beings.

Schools of thought (1970s): the welfare/humanistic school (social well-being — housing, health, education), the radical school (Marxian theory on poverty and inequality under capitalism), and the behavioural school (lived experience and perception of space by ethnicity, race, religion, etc.).

Fields & sub-fields: human geography is highly inter-disciplinary — Social, Urban, Political, Population, Settlement and Economic Geography, each interfacing with sister disciplines like Sociology, Political Science, Demography, Economics and Anthropology.

NCERT Exercises — Full Solutions

All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Exercises section. Answers are original, written in CBSE exam-ready style.

1. Choose the right answer from the four alternatives given below.

(i) Which one of the following statements does not describe geography? (a) an integrative discipline (b) study of the inter-relationship between humans and environment (c) subjected to dualism (d) not relevant in the present time due to the development of technology.

ANSWER (d) not relevant in the present time due to the development of technology. Geography is an integrative, empirical and practical discipline that studies the inter-relationship between humans and environment, and it has indeed been subjected to dualism. Statement (d) is false — technology has made geographical study more, not less, relevant, because every phenomenon that varies over space and time can be studied geographically.

(ii) Which one of the following is not a source of geographical information? (a) traveller’s accounts (b) old maps (c) samples of rock materials from the moon (d) ancient epics

ANSWER (c) samples of rock materials from the moon. Traveller’s accounts, old maps and ancient epics all describe places, peoples and landscapes on the earth’s surface and so are sources of geographical information. Rock samples from the moon belong to lunar/space science, not to the study of the earth as the home of human beings.

(iii) Which one of the following is the most important factor in the interaction between people and environment? (a) human intelligence (b) people’s perception (c) technology (d) human brotherhood

ANSWER (c) technology. Human beings interact with the physical environment with the help of technology. It is not what humans produce but the tools and techniques with which they produce that matter most; technology indicates the level of cultural development and loosens the shackles of the environment on human beings.

(iv) Which one of the following is not an approach in human geography? (a) Areal differentiation (b) Spatial organisation (c) Quantitative revolution (d) Exploration and description

ANSWER (c) Quantitative revolution. Exploration and description (early colonial), areal differentiation (1930s–inter-war) and spatial organisation (late 1950s–1960s) are named as approaches of human geography in Table 1.1. The quantitative revolution was the name given to the phase of spatial organisation (the use of computers, statistical tools and laws of physics), not a separate approach in itself.

2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.

(i) Define human geography.

ANSWER Human geography is the synthetic study of the relationship between human societies and the earth’s surface (Ratzel). It studies the inter-relationship between the physical environment and the socio-cultural environment created by human beings through mutual interaction.

(ii) Name some sub-fields of human geography.

ANSWER Some sub-fields are Behavioural Geography, Geography of Social Well-being, Cultural Geography, Gender Geography, Historical Geography, Medical Geography, Electoral Geography, Military Geography, and the Geography of Resources, Agriculture, Industries, Marketing, Tourism and International Trade.

(iii) How is human geography related to other social sciences?

ANSWER Human geography is highly inter-disciplinary. It develops a close interface with sister social sciences — Sociology, Psychology, Economics, Political Science, History, Anthropology and Demography — to understand and explain the human elements on the earth’s surface.

3. Answer the following questions in not more than 150 words.

(i) Explain naturalisation of humans.

ANSWER Naturalisation of humans refers to the early stage of human–environment interaction when the level of technology was very low and human social development was primitive. At this stage, human beings were greatly influenced by Nature and adapted to its dictates rather than modifying it. This type of interaction between primitive human society and the strong forces of Nature was termed environmental determinism. Nature was a powerful force — worshipped, revered, feared and conserved — and physical environment became the ‘Mother Nature’ on which such societies depended directly for the resources that sustained them. The textbook’s example of Benda, who lives in the Abujh Maad forests of central India, practises shifting cultivation, thanks Loi-Lugi (the spirit of the forest) before drinking water, and lives in complete harmony with the forest, illustrates a naturalised human who listened to Nature, was afraid of its fury and worshipped it.

(ii) Write a note on the scope of human geography.

ANSWER Human geography attempts to explain the relationship between all elements of human life and the space over which they occur. Because it deals with every aspect of human activity, it assumes a highly inter-disciplinary nature, developing a close interface with the sister disciplines of the social sciences. As knowledge expands, new sub-fields keep emerging. Its broad fields and their interfaces include: Social Geography (Sociology) with sub-fields like Behavioural, Cultural, Gender, Historical and Medical Geography and the Geography of Social Well-being and Leisure; Urban Geography (Urban Studies and Planning); Political Geography (Political Science) with Electoral and Military Geography; Population Geography (Demography); Settlement Geography (Urban/Rural Planning); and Economic Geography (Economics) with the Geography of Resources, Agriculture, Industries, Marketing, Tourism and International Trade. Thus the scope of human geography is extensive, covering social, urban, political, population, settlement and economic dimensions of human life on the earth’s surface.

Extra Practice Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. What is meant by the ‘dualism’ in geography?

ANSWERDualism refers to the division of geography into opposing pairs — physical vs human geography, nomothetic (law-making) vs idiographic (descriptive) study, and regional vs systematic approaches. The chapter holds this dichotomy invalid, since nature and human are inseparable and should be seen holistically.

Q2. Define possibilism with an example.

ANSWERPossibilism is the view that Nature provides opportunities while human beings, using technology, make use of them and create possibilities — thereby humanising Nature. Kari’s comfortable life in icy Trondheim, with heated offices, a glass dome and imported tropical fruits, is an example of humanised Nature.

Q3. Why is technology considered an indicator of cultural development?

ANSWERTechnology is the set of tools and techniques humans use to interact with Nature. Human beings could develop technology only after understanding natural laws — friction and heat led to fire, and knowledge of DNA helped conquer diseases — so the level of technology reflects the society’s level of cultural development.

Q4. What is the radical school of thought in human geography?

ANSWERThe radical school of thought, which emerged in the 1970s, employed Marxian theory to explain the basic causes of poverty, deprivation and social inequality. It related contemporary social problems to the development of capitalism.

Q5. Name any two metaphors from human anatomy used to describe geographical phenomena.

ANSWERGeographical phenomena are often described using metaphors from human anatomy — for example the ‘face’ of the earth, the ‘eye’ of the storm, the ‘mouth’ of a river, the ‘snout’ (nose) of a glacier and the ‘neck’ of an isthmus. Road, rail and waterway networks are called “arteries of circulation”.

Long Answer Type Questions

Q1. Distinguish between environmental determinism, possibilism and neo-determinism.

ANSWEREnvironmental determinism describes the early stage when low technology made primitive societies adapt to the dictates of Nature; Nature was a powerful force, worshipped and feared, and humans were ‘naturalised’. Possibilism arose with social and cultural development and better technology: humans moved from a state of necessity to a state of freedom, created possibilities with the resources of the environment, and built a cultural landscape — Nature became ‘humanised’. Neo-determinism, or stop-and-go determinism, was Griffith Taylor’s middle path (Madhyam Marg). Using the metaphor of traffic lights, it holds that there is neither absolute necessity (determinism) nor absolute freedom (possibilism): human beings can conquer Nature only by obeying it, creating possibilities within limits that do not damage the environment. The unchecked ‘free run’ of developed economies has already caused the greenhouse effect, ozone depletion, global warming and receding glaciers, which neo-determinism seeks to balance.

Q2. Trace the broad stages in the historical development of human geography.

ANSWERHuman geography developed in broad stages (Table 1.1). In the early colonial period, imperial and trade interests prompted the exploration and description of new areas, with encyclopaedic accounts. In the later colonial period, regional analysis gave elaborate descriptions of regions seen as parts of a whole. From the 1930s through the inter-war period, areal differentiation focused on the uniqueness of each region. From the late 1950s to the late 1960s came spatial organisation, marked by computers, statistical tools and the ‘quantitative revolution’. In the 1970s, discontent with the dehumanised quantitative approach gave rise to the humanistic, radical and behavioural schools. In the 1990s, post-modernism questioned grand generalisations and stressed understanding each local context in its own right.

Q3. Explain the fields of human geography and their interface with sister disciplines.

ANSWERHuman geography is highly inter-disciplinary, interfacing with the sister disciplines of the social sciences (Table 1.2). Social Geography interfaces with Sociology, and its sub-fields with Psychology (Behavioural Geography), Welfare Economics (Geography of Social Well-being), Anthropology (Cultural Geography), Women’s Studies (Gender Geography), History (Historical Geography) and Epidemiology (Medical Geography). Urban Geography links with Urban Studies and Planning. Political Geography links with Political Science, with Electoral Geography interfacing Psephology and Military Geography with Military Science. Population Geography links with Demography, and Settlement Geography with Urban/Rural Planning. Economic Geography links with Economics, its sub-fields covering Resources, Agriculture (Agricultural Sciences), Industries (Industrial Economics), Marketing (Business Studies/Commerce), Tourism (Tourism Management) and International Trade.
Field of Human GeographyInterface with Sister Discipline
Social GeographySociology
Urban GeographyUrban Studies and Planning
Political GeographyPolitical Science
Population GeographyDemography
Settlement GeographyUrban/Rural Planning
Economic GeographyEconomics

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. Who defined human geography as “the synthetic study of relationship between human societies and earth’s surface”?

(a) Ellen C. Semple    (b) Ratzel    (c) Paul Vidal de la Blache    (d) Griffith Taylor

2. The two major components of the earth’s surface are:

(a) land and water    (b) nature and life forms including human beings    (c) regions and systems    (d) flora and fauna

3. The direct dependence of primitive society on the strong forces of Nature is termed:

(a) possibilism    (b) neo-determinism    (c) environmental determinism    (d) post-modernism

4. The concept of ‘stop and go determinism’ was introduced by:

(a) Ratzel    (b) Ellen C. Semple    (c) Griffith Taylor    (d) Vidal de la Blache

5. Naturalisation of Nature into a cultural landscape by human endeavour is described as:

(a) determinism    (b) possibilism    (c) dualism    (d) idiographic study

6. “Human geography is the study of the changing relationship between the unresting man and the unstable earth” is a definition by:

(a) Ratzel    (b) Ellen C. Semple    (c) Griffith Taylor    (d) Vidal de la Blache

7. The phase marked by the use of computers and statistical tools is called the:

(a) areal differentiation    (b) regional analysis    (c) quantitative revolution    (d) post-modernism

8. The welfare or humanistic school of thought was mainly concerned with:

(a) capitalism and poverty    (b) social well-being – housing, health and education    (c) lived experience and perception    (d) trade and exploration

9. Electoral Geography interfaces with which discipline?

(a) Demography    (b) Psephology    (c) Epidemiology    (d) Anthropology

10. The debate over whether geography should be law-making or descriptive refers respectively to:

(a) regional and systematic    (b) nomothetic and idiographic    (c) physical and human    (d) empirical and practical

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

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 dichotomy between physical and human geography is not a very valid one.

Reason: Nature and human are inseparable elements and should be seen holistically.

A-R 2. Assertion: Neo-determinism means human beings can conquer Nature by obeying it.

Reason: Possibilities can be created only within limits that do not damage the environment.

A-R 3. Assertion: Technology loosens the shackles of the environment on human beings.

Reason: Human beings developed technology only after they developed a better understanding of natural laws.

A-R 4. Assertion: Human geography is a highly inter-disciplinary subject.

Reason: It attempts to explain the relationship between all elements of human life and the space they occur over.

A-R 5. Assertion: In environmental determinism humans modify Nature freely according to their will.

Reason: In the early stages of interaction the level of technology was very low and society was primitive.

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

Exam Tips & Common Mistakes

How to score full marks in this chapter

Memorise the four key definitions of human geography with their authors (Ratzel, Ellen C. Semple, Vidal de la Blache) and the keyword each emphasises — synthesis, dynamism, interrelationship. Be able to distinguish environmental determinism, possibilism and neo-determinism with the textbook’s own examples (Benda’s forest life, Kari’s Trondheim, the traffic-light metaphor). For the historical development, learn the six stages and their approaches from Table 1.1 in order. Use the field–sub-field interfaces from Table 1.2 for scope questions, and always finish a 150-word answer with a holistic concluding line.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Confusing environmental determinism (Nature dictates) with possibilism (humans create possibilities).
  • Attributing ‘stop-and-go determinism’ to the wrong scholar — it was given by Griffith Taylor.
  • Mixing up nomothetic (law-making) with idiographic (descriptive) approaches.
  • Treating the ‘quantitative revolution’ as a separate approach — it is the name for the spatial organisation phase.
  • Listing fields without their interface discipline when the question asks for the scope/sub-fields.
  • Writing more than the word limit (30 words / 150 words) and losing focus marks.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Chapter 1 of Class 12 Geography (Fundamentals of Human Geography) about?

Chapter 1, Human Geography: Nature and Scope, defines human geography as the synthetic study of the relationship between human societies and the earth’s surface. It explains how humans interact with Nature through technology, the approaches of environmental determinism, possibilism and neo-determinism, the historical development of the discipline, and its fields and sub-fields.

What is the difference between environmental determinism and possibilism?

Environmental determinism is the early stage where low technology made primitive societies adapt to the dictates of Nature (the ‘naturalised human’). Possibilism is the later stage where better technology let humans create possibilities and build a cultural landscape, humanising Nature. Griffith Taylor’s neo-determinism is the middle path between the two.

How many questions are in the Class 12 Geography Chapter 1 NCERT exercise?

The exercise has three parts: Question 1 with four multiple-choice items (i–iv), Question 2 with three short questions of about 30 words (i–iii), and Question 3 with two long questions of up to 150 words (i–ii). All are answered step by step on this page.

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