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2. Study Figure 2 carefully. Figure 2 (a) Name the plate margins marked X, Y and Z. Give examples. (b) (i) (6 marks) Compare and explain the features of the plate margins X and Y. (6 marks) (ii) Describe the processes taking place along margin Z. (2 marks) (c) Briefly describe the impact of crustal movements of peoples' lives and explain why damage during crustal movements often varies in severity. (6 marks) 3. Figure 3 shows an ecocline in tropical rain forest leading from equator towards the tropical desert. Figure 3 (a) Briefly define the term "ecocline. (2 marks) (b) Describe the ecocline from the equator to the Tropic of Cancer. (5 marks) (c) Describe how vegetation changes along the ecocline and state what has caused the change. (8 marks) (d) In what ways had man also played a part in changing the vegetation pattern in this ecocline? (5 marks) 4. Table 4 gives a detailed description of an acidic soil. Study the table carefully before answering. Table 4 Horizon A (0-5 cm) Morphology B (5-100 cm) C (100 cm +) Main composition Thin, dark, granular structure, little fresh litter on top thick, red to reddishbrown, granular to blocky structure, well-drained mineral mixed with decomposed organic matter mainly kaolinite clay mixed with oxides of iron and aluminium and some residual minerals (mainly quartz grains) varying thickness, red weathered rock with to reddish-yellow, some partly weathered rock structure visible minerals (a) Name the soil. Main Processes Rapid decomposition of organic matter, humus formation Very intense weathering, strong leaching with removal of nearly all soluble ions (basses and silica) strong weathering, reorganization of minerals soil (2 marks) (b) Describe the spatial pattern in the world distribution of such kind of soil. (3 marks) (c) Explain how the formation of this soil is influenced by (i) climate. (4 marks) (ii) topography, and (3 marks) (iii) organisms. (3 marks) (d) Name five human activities that could lead to changes in the characteristics of this soil and explain how each one works. (5 marks) S.6 Geog. Final Exam. (2000-2001) Suggested Answer 2. (a) X shows the constructive plate margin/zone of spreading such as (6 marks) the Mid Atlantic Oceanic Ridge. Y shows the destructive plate margin/zone of subduction such as the Himalayas/the Andes/the Rockies. Z shows the conservative plate margin such as the San Andreas Fault. (b) (i) X - divergence of plates - constructive plate margin - processes of spreading/tension - oceanic crust and oceanic crust - creation of new earth crust in a spreading zone - forming oceanic ridges with volcanic origin - volcanism and shallow seismic activities - basic volcanic materials Y (6 marks) - 2 plates move towards one another - destructive plate margin - processes of collision/compression/folding - formation of tectonic mountains - intersections of oceanic crust and continental crust - destructive of earth crust - subduction of ocean crust, formation of ocean trenches - benioff zone with deep-seated earthquakes volcanism and volcanic mountains - acidic volcanic materials (ii) The Pacific Plate and the American Plate are moving alongside each other, crust is neither destroyed nor created. (2 marks) (c) Beneficial impacts on man: - fertile soils derived from volcanic ashed - building materials - formation of mineral ores - geothermal energy (2 marks) Hazardous impacts on man: Lithological hazards e.g. seismic activies, tsunamis, avalanches and landslides, volcanic ash eruptions (2 marks) Severity of damages depends on: - the intensity and magnitude of crustal movements - population density of the areas involved - preventive measures adopted - knowledge and perception (2 marks) 3. (a) Ecocline is a broad transition along which plant communities and environments change. (2 marks) (b) - it is hot and wet at the equator but hot dry at the Tropic of Cancer - the amount of rainfall significantly decreases poleward - the latitudinal variation in mean annual temperature nevertheless is small - the zonal soil group in equatorial region are mainly lateritic red soil and grey brown podsolic soil - prairie soils, brown soils and desert soils occur in sequence towards the Tropic of Cancer. (5 marks) (c) Vegetation communities changes rapidly along the ecocline, indicating a steep environment gradient exists. Vegetation shows the following morphological changes towards the desert: - a decrease in the height of vegetation, - a decrease in the percentage of surface coverage by plants, a reduction in biomass / primary productivity, increasingly poor in species, both trees and shrubs adapt increasing xerophytic features: a. deciduous forest first replacing the evergreen rainforest. Trees shed leaves in the short dry season to conserve moisture. b. In the savanna, trees become thorny and widely spaced. Some trees develop bottle-like trunk to store water. c. Shrubs replace trees as the dominant plant species in the drier end of the ecocline. d. Plants have long tap roots which penetrate deeper into the subsoil to reach groundwater. (8 marks) (d) - Ecocline from rainforest to desert demonstrate human influences on the change in vegetation. Forests reduce while grasslands expand. Lumbering and frequent burning (by shifting cultivators) suppress the growth of trees. Trees take longer time to recover and therefore remain no longer the dominant plant species. They are replaced by grasses which recover faster on cleared sites.(5 marks) - 4. (a) Latosol, or lateritic soil, or ferralsol (2 marks) (b) - mainly found in the equatorial and tropical monsoon regions - rainfall (up to 2000 mm) - mean and monthly temperature are high and constant - in North Brazil (the Amazon Basin), the West Indies, Central Africa (the Congo Basin), South India (3 marks) (c) (i) - high temperature, high rainfall, small seasonal variation - rapid and intense decomposition and weathering, kaolinite and sequioxides formed strong leaching, nutrients washed away organic matter breaks down rapidly, little litter or humus in topsoil (4 marks) (ii) - steep slope- erosion, truncation of topsoil, soil development arrested gentle slope- deep and mature soil altitude- changes in climate and therefore soil-forming pressures. (iii) - Favourable environment for organisms to thrive - rapid growth, quick cycling of nutrients Abundant flora and fauna in soil assist decomposition of organic matter and formation of structure. (3 marks) - (d) - Deforestation - erosion, loss of topsoil and nutrients. - Fertilization - change nutrient status and soil structure. - Cultivation - structural change, flora and fauna changes. - Harvesting - removal of nutrients, breakdown of closed nutrient cycles. - Mining - removal of soil materials, dumping of soil materials on the existing soil. (5 marks)