Geography, asked by shaikyasin137, 1 year ago

Gc leong landformss of glaciation explain

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Answered by Vivek111s
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How do I correctly use GC Leong for UPSC CAPF preparation for Geography?

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Aayushi Rakhecha, works at Doordarshan National

Answered Sep 14 · Author has 156 answers and104.7k answer views

How G.C.Leong should be read for any competetive exam-

There are total 25 chapters and they are divided and studied on the basis of their similar content. It gives you more rational way to complete the book in simplistic way with better understanding.Read the chapter of ocean, lakes, coral reef together. Club the chapters of landforms by water, air and glaciation together specially for revision.Pay a closer attention to terminologies used and explained. Eg- corrosion is different than corrasion, both different to attrition.There are some maps which are the main backbone of any understanding in geography. I am listing some of them. Eg- Revolution of earth with its dates + it's sinusoidal diagram, Map of warm and and cold current, Relief of ocean surface, World pressure belts.Whenever the book talks about any process or phenomenon, try imagining that situation and decode the process in your mind step by step. Eg- making of waterfall and plug pool. Diagrams make it easier for us to fix the complex concept.Chapter 15 to 25-they describe about the different climatic zines on world map-equatorial, polar, desert, Mediterranean. There is a certain way to study it. You have to make a matrix to complete them in one go. You have to divide your page in 11 blocks as described on page 114 of book itself. now divide each chapter this way- region, climate and rain, location, people occupation, flora and fauna, under these headings you have to write specific details. This way you can complete the book within your time limit and with expected clarity.

Answered by Anonymous
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Answer:

Glaciers are made up of fallen snow that, over many years, compresses into large, thickened ice masses. Glaciers form when snow remains in one location long enough to transform into ice. ... Due to sheer mass, glaciers flow like very slow rivers

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