SSC Geography Latitude and Longitude PPT Slides (LEC #2)

SSC Geography Latitude and Longitude PPT Slides (LEC #2)

This article accompanies the SSC Geography Latitude and Longitude PPT Slides (LEC #2) – Serial #80 of the Complete Foundation Batch for All SSC Exams PPT Series on slideshareppt.net. With 91 slides, this is one of the most detailed lectures in the series, covering every concept from the basics of parallels and meridians to time zones, IST, the International Date Line, and India-specific latitude and longitude facts. Latitude and Longitude form the backbone of all geographical study and are among the most consistently and heavily tested topics in SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, SSC MTS, SSC GD Constable, and RRB Group D exams. This article gives you the complete theory, structured tables, MCQ practice, and a rapid revision cheat sheet – everything needed for a 100% score on this topic.

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PPT Resource Overview

DetailInformation
Lecture NumberLEC #2 (Geography Series)
Serial Number in Complete Batch#80
SubjectGeography – Latitude and Longitude (अक्षांश और देशांतर)
Series NameComplete Foundation Batch for All SSC Exams (PPT Series)
Total Slides91 PPT Slides
File Size20 MB
LanguageHindi + English (Bilingual)
Format AvailableGoogle Slides & Google Drive (PDF also available)
Websitewww.slideshareppt.net
Target ExamsSSC CGL, SSC CHSL, SSC MTS, SSC GD Constable, RRB Group D
Suitable ForStudents (self-study & marathon revision) and Teachers (classroom use)

SSC Geography Latitude and Longitude PPT Slides (LEC #2)

Note: Above is PPT in GOOGLE SLIDES (HTML AND IFRAME COMBINATION) and if you wish to download the Complete SSC series (PPT slides), visit this Link – REDIRECT PAGE.

Master Timeline: Development of the Latitude-Longitude System

PeriodMilestoneSignificance for SSC
~600 BCE – Ancient GreeceAnaximander draws the first flat world map; no coordinate system yetOrigin of map-making concept
~276–194 BCEEratosthenes divides the Earth into zones using parallel circles; calculates circumferenceFirst scientific use of latitude concept
~150 BCE – HipparchusHipparchus proposes a grid of 360° for Earth – divides into latitudes and longitudes formallyFirst formal lat-long grid system
~150 CE – PtolemyPtolemy publishes Geographia – assigns coordinates to ~8,000 locations; introduces map projectionsFoundation of coordinate-based cartography
9th–13th CenturyArab geographers refine Ptolemy’s work; Al-Idrisi creates advanced coordinate-based world mapsArab contribution to geography
1569 – MercatorGerardus Mercator develops the Mercator Projection – straight lines for constant compass bearingMost widely used map projection; SSC cartography topic
1714 – Longitude Act (Britain)British Parliament offers £20,000 prize for an accurate method to determine longitude at seaImportance of longitude in navigation history
1759 – Harrison’s ChronometerJohn Harrison invents the marine chronometer H4 – accurate time-keeping solves the longitude problem at seaHow longitude and time are linked
1851Greenwich Observatory established as the international reference for time (GMT – Greenwich Mean Time)GMT origin – IST is derived from GMT
1884 – Washington DC ConferenceInternational Meridian Conference – Greenwich (0°) officially adopted as the Prime Meridian by 25 nationsWhy Greenwich is 0° – most asked SSC fact
1884The world is formally divided into 24 standard time zones of 15° eachTime zone concept – 1 hour per 15° longitude
1947 – India IndependenceIndia adopts IST at 82.5°E (GMT + 5:30) as its single national standard timeIST origin – very frequently tested
Post-1950sGPS (Global Positioning System) uses latitude-longitude coordinates for satellite-based locationModern application of lat-long
1978 – GPS LaunchUSA launches the first GPS satellites – lat-long becomes the global standard for navigationGPS and lat-long for modern geography
Present DayGoogle Maps, GIS platforms, ISRO Bhuvan, and mobile apps all use the lat-long coordinate systemCurrent Affairs + Geography

What are Latitudes? – Complete Explanation

Latitudes are imaginary horizontal lines drawn on the Earth’s surface that run parallel to the Equator. They measure the angular distance of any point on Earth north or south of the Equator. The Equator itself is at 0° latitude, the North Pole is at 90°N, and the South Pole is at 90°S. Because all lines of latitude run parallel to each other, they are also called parallels.

Key Properties of Latitudes

  • Direction: Run east-west (horizontal lines on a map)
  • Shape: Circles parallel to the Equator – called parallels of latitude
  • Range: 0° (Equator) to 90°N (North Pole) and 90°S (South Pole)
  • Total number of latitudes: 181 (including 0° Equator, 90 in each hemisphere)
  • Length: The Equator (0°) is the longest latitude; length decreases toward the poles
  • Distance: Each degree of latitude = approximately 111 km on the ground
  • Purpose: Used to measure north-south position and define climate zones

All Important Latitudes – Complete Reference Table

LatitudeDegreeAlso Known AsKey Facts & SSC Importance
EquatorGreat Circle / 0° ParallelLongest latitude line; divides Earth into N & S hemispheres; sun is directly overhead on equinoxes; 12-hour day year-round; maximum temperature zone
Tropic of Cancer23.5° NNorthern Tropic / Uttara Ayana RekhaSun directly overhead on June 21 (Summer Solstice); passes through India (8 states), Mexico, China, Egypt, Saudi Arabia; northern boundary of tropics
Tropic of Capricorn23.5° SSouthern Tropic / Dakshina Ayana RekhaSun directly overhead on December 22 (Winter Solstice); passes through Australia, Brazil, South Africa, Chile; southern boundary of tropics
Arctic Circle66.5° NNorthern Polar CircleMidnight Sun in summer (June 21); Polar Night in winter; boundary of North Frigid Zone; passes through Norway, Sweden, Finland, Russia, Canada, Alaska, Greenland, Iceland
Antarctic Circle66.5° SSouthern Polar CircleMidnight Sun in December 22; boundary of South Frigid Zone; encloses Antarctica
North Pole90° NBoreal PoleNorthernmost point of Earth; 6 months continuous daylight (April–Sept); 6 months darkness (Oct–March); no landmass – Arctic Ocean
South Pole90° SAustral PoleSouthernmost point; coldest place on Earth; located on Antarctic continent; Amundsen & Scott reached it in 1911
23.5°N to 23.5°STropical ZoneTorrid ZoneRegion receiving maximum solar energy; high temperatures year-round; tropical climate
23.5° to 66.5° (both hemispheres)Temperate ZoneTemperate BeltModerate climate; four distinct seasons; most populated zone on Earth
66.5° to 90° (both hemispheres)Frigid ZonePolar ZoneExtreme cold; very long days and nights; sparse population

Important Latitudes Passing Through India

LatitudeDegreeStates / Regions It Passes ThroughExam Importance
Tropic of Cancer23.5° NGujarat → Rajasthan → Madhya Pradesh → Chhattisgarh → Jharkhand → West Bengal → Tripura → Mizoram (8 states)Very High – appears in almost every SSC paper
India’s Southern Tip~8° NIndira Point (Great Nicobar Island) – southernmost point of IndiaHigh – extreme points of India
India’s Northern Tip~37° NIndira Col (near Siachen, J&K) – northernmost point of IndiaHigh – extreme points of India
Latitudinal Extent8°4’N to 37°6’NEntire span of India from south to northHigh – frequently asked as MCQ

Memory Trick: Tropic of Cancer Through 8 Indian States

Use this sentence to remember the 8 states from West to East:

“Gujarat Rajasthan Mein (MP) Chhattisgarh Jharkhand Wale Tukde Mein” – G R M C J W T M

  • G – Gujarat
  • R – Rajasthan
  • M – Madhya Pradesh
  • C – Chhattisgarh
  • J – Jharkhand
  • W – West Bengal
  • T – Tripura
  • M – Mizoram

What are Longitudes? – Complete Explanation

Longitudes are imaginary vertical lines drawn on the Earth’s surface that run from the North Pole to the South Pole. They measure the angular distance of any point east or west of the Prime Meridian (0°). Since all lines of longitude pass through both poles and meet at them, they are also called meridians. Unlike latitudes, all meridians are equal in length.

Key Properties of Longitudes

  • Direction: Run north-south (vertical lines on a map)
  • Shape: Semi-circles that meet at the North and South Poles – called meridians
  • Range: 0° (Prime Meridian) to 180°E and 180°W (which are the same line – the IDL)
  • Total number of longitudes: 360 (180 East + 180 West)
  • Length: All meridians are equal in length (unlike latitudes which decrease toward poles)
  • Distance: 1° of longitude = 111 km at the Equator; distance decreases toward the poles
  • Purpose: Used to measure east-west position and calculate local time
  • Key rule: Every 1° of longitude = 4 minutes difference in time; every 15° = 1 hour

All Important Longitudes – Complete Reference Table

LongitudeDegreeAlso Known AsKey Facts & SSC Importance
Prime MeridianGreenwich Meridian / International MeridianPasses through Greenwich, England; divides Earth into Eastern and Western Hemispheres; basis for all world time zones; established as global standard in 1884; also passes through France, Spain, Algeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana
International Date Line (IDL)180°Anti-Meridian / Date MeridianOpposite the Prime Meridian; zigzag path to avoid cutting through Russia, Kiribati, Fiji; crossing West to East removes a calendar day; crossing East to West adds a day; not a straight line – bends around Pacific island nations
Indian Standard Meridian82.5° EIST Meridian / Mirzapur MeridianPasses through Mirzapur, Uttar Pradesh; India’s standard time = GMT + 5 hours 30 minutes; chosen because 82.5° gives a clean offset (82.5 ÷ 15 = 5.5 hours); India uses a single time zone despite wide east-west extent
Eastern Hemisphere0° to 180° EEastern Half of EarthIncludes Asia, Australia, most of Africa, and Europe east of Greenwich
Western Hemisphere0° to 180° WWestern Half of EarthIncludes North America, South America, and western parts of Europe and Africa

Time and Longitude – The Most Important Relationship

The relationship between time and longitude is one of the most tested concepts in SSC Geography. Every exam has at least one question on IST, time zones, or time calculation.

Core Rules

  • Earth rotates 360° in 24 hours
  • Therefore Earth rotates 15° per hour (360 ÷ 24 = 15)
  • Therefore 1° of longitude = 4 minutes of time (60 min ÷ 15 = 4 min)
  • Places east of the Prime Meridian are ahead in time (earlier sunrise)
  • Places west of the Prime Meridian are behind in time (later sunrise)
  • Every 15° east = 1 hour added to GMT; every 15° west = 1 hour subtracted from GMT

World Time Zones – Reference Table

Country / RegionLongitude UsedTime Difference from GMTNote
United Kingdom0° (Greenwich)GMT / UTC (IST – 5:30)Multiple time zones in overseas territories
India82.5° EGMT + 5:30 (IST)Single time zone for entire country
China120° EGMT + 8:00 (CST)Single time zone despite huge east-west spread
Japan135° EGMT + 9:00 (JST)East Asia – early morning sunrise
RussiaMultiple (30°E to 180°E)GMT +2 to GMT +1211 time zones – most in any single country
USA (Continental)Multiple (75°W to 120°W)GMT –5 to GMT –84 main time zones: Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific
Australia150° E (AEST)GMT + 10:00 (AEST)Multiple zones; half-hour offsets in some states
Pakistan67.5° EGMT + 5:00 (PKT)30 minutes behind IST
Nepal82.5° E (approx.)GMT + 5:45 (NPT)Unique 45-minute offset; 15 min ahead of IST
Sri Lanka82.5° EGMT + 5:30 (SLST)Same time as IST
Bangladesh90° EGMT + 6:00 (BST)30 minutes ahead of IST
Afghanistan67.5° EGMT + 4:30 (AFT)45 minutes behind IST

Indian Standard Time (IST) – Deep Dive

Why 82.5°E and Not 82° or 83°?

IST is based on 82.5°E longitude because this gives a clean, exact time offset. The calculation: 82.5° ÷ 15° per hour = 5.5 hours = 5 hours 30 minutes ahead of GMT. Using 82° would give 5 hours 28 minutes, and 83° would give 5 hours 32 minutes – neither is a clean round figure. The 82.5°E meridian was therefore selected to make IST exactly GMT + 5:30.

Which City/Place Does 82.5°E Pass Through?

The 82.5°E meridian passes through Mirzapur in Uttar Pradesh. This is the official reference point for Indian Standard Time. The National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in New Delhi is India’s official timekeeper and broadcasts IST signals.

Why Does India Have Only One Time Zone?

India spans from 68.7°E (Gujarat) to 97.25°E (Arunachal Pradesh) – a difference of about 28.5°, which theoretically means nearly 2 hours of natural time difference between east and west. Despite this, India has maintained a single time zone since independence for administrative simplicity and national unity. The eastern states (especially Assam and Arunachal Pradesh) experience sunrise much earlier than western states (Gujarat and Rajasthan), which is a frequently raised issue but has not resulted in a zone split.

ParameterDetail
IST Standard Meridian82.5°E longitude
Reference CityMirzapur, Uttar Pradesh
Offset from GMTGMT + 5 hours 30 minutes
India’s Westernmost Longitude68°7’E (Sir Creek, Gujarat)
India’s Easternmost Longitude97°25’E (Kibithu, Arunachal Pradesh)
Natural Time Difference (East vs West)~1 hour 54 minutes
Official Timekeeper of IndiaNational Physical Laboratory (NPL), New Delhi
IST Adoption1947, at Indian Independence
Difference from Pakistan Time (PKT)IST is 30 minutes ahead of PKT
Difference from Nepal Time (NPT)IST is 15 minutes behind NPT
Difference from Bangladesh Time (BST)IST is 30 minutes behind BST

International Date Line (IDL) – Complete Explanation

The International Date Line (IDL) is an imaginary line that roughly follows the 180° meridian – the line exactly opposite the Prime Meridian on the globe. It marks the boundary between two consecutive calendar days. When you cross the IDL from east to west, you gain a day (move forward by one calendar day). When you cross from west to east, you lose a day (move back by one calendar day).

Why Does the IDL Zigzag?

The IDL does not follow the 180° meridian exactly because doing so would divide some countries, islands, and territories into two different calendar days. It bends significantly to ensure that Kiribati (Caroline Islands), Fiji, Tonga, Samoa, and parts of Russia all fall entirely on one side, avoiding the inconvenience of split dates within a single country or territory.

FeatureDetail
LocationApproximately 180° longitude (in the Pacific Ocean)
PathZigzag – deviates from 180° to avoid splitting countries
Crossing West to EastSubtract one calendar day (traveller loses a day)
Crossing East to WestAdd one calendar day (traveller gains a day)
Countries it avoids splittingKiribati, Fiji, Russia, Tonga, Samoa, New Zealand territories
Distance from Prime MeridianExactly opposite – 180° apart
NatureImaginary line – no physical existence on the ground
Legal StatusNot defined by any international treaty; agreed by convention
First country to see New YearKiribati (Line Islands) – westernmost side of IDL
Last country to see New YearBaker Island and Howland Island (USA) – easternmost side of IDL

Climate Zones Defined by Latitude

Zone NameLatitude RangeClimate TypeKey Features
Torrid Zone (Tropical)0° to 23.5° N & SHot and humid; tropicalMaximum solar radiation; tropical rainforests; monsoons; highest temperatures on Earth
North Temperate Zone23.5° N to 66.5° NModerate; four seasonsMost of Europe, USA, China, India (northern part); spring, summer, autumn, winter
South Temperate Zone23.5° S to 66.5° SModerate; four seasonsSouthern South America, parts of Australia, New Zealand, South Africa
North Frigid Zone (Arctic)66.5° N to 90° NExtremely cold; polarTundra climate; midnight sun; polar night; very sparse population
South Frigid Zone (Antarctic)66.5° S to 90° SExtremely cold; polarAntarctica; coldest and driest continent; ice sheets; scientific research stations

The Coordinate System – Locating Any Point on Earth

Every point on Earth’s surface can be precisely located using its latitude and longitude coordinates together. This is the coordinate system that forms the basis of all modern maps, GPS navigation, GIS software, and satellite imagery.

How to Read Coordinates

  • Latitude is always written first, followed by longitude
  • Example: New Delhi is approximately 28.6°N, 77.2°E – 28.6° north of the Equator and 77.2° east of the Prime Meridian
  • Mumbai: approximately 19.1°N, 72.9°E
  • Chennai: approximately 13.1°N, 80.3°E
  • Kolkata: approximately 22.6°N, 88.4°E
  • Bangalore (Bengaluru): approximately 12.9°N, 77.6°E

also read: SSC Geography Introduction PPT Slides (LEC #1)

Coordinates of Important Indian and World Cities – SSC Reference Table

City / LocationLatitudeLongitudeCountry / State
New Delhi28.6° N77.2° EIndia (National Capital)
Mumbai19.1° N72.9° EIndia (Maharashtra)
Chennai13.1° N80.3° EIndia (Tamil Nadu)
Kolkata22.6° N88.4° EIndia (West Bengal)
Bengaluru12.9° N77.6° EIndia (Karnataka)
Hyderabad17.4° N78.5° EIndia (Telangana)
Mirzapur (IST Ref)25.1° N82.5° EIndia (Uttar Pradesh) – Standard Meridian
Greenwich51.5° NUnited Kingdom – Prime Meridian
Equator / 0°,0°Point in Atlantic Ocean (Null Island)
Mt. Everest27.9° N86.9° ENepal–China border
Indira Point (Southernmost India)~6.7° N~93.8° EAndaman & Nicobar Islands
Kibithu (Easternmost India)~28.0° N~97.4° EArunachal Pradesh
Sir Creek (Westernmost India)~23.6° N~68.2° EGujarat
London51.5° N0.1° WUnited Kingdom
Beijing39.9° N116.4° EChina
Tokyo35.7° N139.7° EJapan
Washington DC38.9° N77.0° WUnited States
Sydney33.9° S151.2° EAustralia
Cairo30.1° N31.2° EEgypt (near Tropic of Cancer)

Difference Between Latitude and Longitude – Comparison Table

FeatureLatitudeLongitude
DefinitionAngular distance N or S of the EquatorAngular distance E or W of the Prime Meridian
Direction on mapHorizontal (east-west lines)Vertical (north-south lines)
Other nameParallelsMeridians
Reference lineEquator (0°)Prime Meridian (0°) – Greenwich
Range0° to 90° (North and South)0° to 180° (East and West)
Total lines181 (including 0° Equator)360 (180 East + 180 West)
Length of linesDecreases from Equator to polesAll equal in length (from pole to pole)
Shape of linesCircles (parallel to each other)Semi-circles (meet at poles)
PurposeDetermines N-S position and climate zoneDetermines E-W position and local time
1 degree distance~111 km (constant)~111 km at Equator; decreases toward poles
Key line (0°)EquatorPrime Meridian (Greenwich)
Key line (23.5°)Tropic of Cancer (N) / Capricorn (S)No special significance at this longitude
Key line (66.5°)Arctic / Antarctic CircleNo special significance at this longitude
Key line (90°)North Pole / South PoleNo special significance (no special meridian)
Key line (180°)Not applicableInternational Date Line
Use in time calculationNo direct use1° = 4 min; 15° = 1 hour
SSC exam frequencyVery High – 3–5 questions per paperVery High – 3–5 questions per paper
SSC Geography Latitude and Longitude PPT Slides (LEC #2)
SSC Geography Latitude and Longitude PPT Slides (LEC #2)

Podcast-Style Q&A – Rapid Oral Revision

Q1: What is the Equator and why is it the most important latitude?

The Equator is the 0° latitude line that divides Earth equally into the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. It is the most important latitude because it is the longest parallel on Earth, receives the maximum solar energy year-round, and is the reference from which all other latitudes are measured. At the Equator, the length of day and night is always equal – 12 hours each – throughout the year.

Q2: What is the difference between the Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn?

Both are at 23.5° from the Equator but in opposite hemispheres. The Tropic of Cancer is at 23.5°N and the Sun is directly overhead on June 21 (the Summer Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere). The Tropic of Capricorn is at 23.5°S and the Sun is directly overhead on December 22 (the Winter Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere, or Summer Solstice in the Southern Hemisphere). The area between these two lines is called the Tropics or Torrid Zone.

Q3: Why do all meridians of longitude meet at the poles?

Meridians are semi-circles that run from the North Pole to the South Pole. Because they all start at the North Pole and end at the South Pole, they physically converge and meet at these two points. This is why the distance represented by 1° of longitude is about 111 km at the Equator but becomes 0 km at the poles – all meridians are physically at the same point there.

Q4: Why was Greenwich chosen as the Prime Meridian?

Greenwich was chosen as the Prime Meridian at the International Meridian Conference held in Washington DC in 1884. At that time, Britain was the world’s dominant naval and colonial power, and Greenwich Observatory was already being used by a majority of the world’s ships for navigation. Adopting Greenwich as 0° was therefore the most practical global choice. 25 out of 41 nations voted in favour at the conference.

Q5: If IST is GMT + 5:30, and someone in London calls at 9:00 AM London time, what time is it in India?

If it is 9:00 AM GMT in London, then IST = 9:00 AM + 5 hours 30 minutes = 2:30 PM in India. This type of calculation is directly tested in SSC reasoning and GK sections. The formula is: IST = GMT + 5 hours 30 minutes. To convert IST to GMT: GMT = IST − 5 hours 30 minutes.

Q6: What happens when you cross the International Date Line?

The International Date Line at 180° marks the boundary between two consecutive calendar days. If you are travelling westward across the IDL (from the Americas toward Asia), you gain a calendar day – for example, you jump from Monday to Tuesday instantly. If you travel eastward across the IDL (from Asia toward the Americas), you lose a calendar day – for example, you go from Tuesday back to Monday. This is why Jules Verne’s character Phileas Fogg in Around the World in Eighty Days gained a day by travelling eastward.

Q7: Why does Nepal have a 45-minute offset from IST?

Nepal’s standard meridian is approximately 82.5°E to 87.5°E, and the Nepalese government chose GMT + 5:45 as its standard time. This gives Nepal a 15-minute difference from India (IST is GMT + 5:30). The unusual 45-minute offset exists because Nepal wanted a time distinct from both India and Bangladesh to assert its independent national identity, while still being close to Indian time for practical cross-border purposes.

30 MCQ Practice Questions – Latitude and Longitude

These questions are modelled on SSC CGL, CHSL, MTS, and GD Constable exam patterns. Answers follow at the end.

  1. Lines of latitude are also called:

A) Meridians  B) Parallels  C) Isobars  D) Isotherms

  • Lines of longitude are also called:

A) Parallels  B) Isobars  C) Meridians  D) Isohalines

  • The Equator is located at:

A) 23.5° N  B) 66.5° N  C) 0°  D) 90° N

  • The total number of latitudes on the globe is:

A) 90  B) 180  C) 181  D) 360

  • The total number of longitudes on the globe is:

A) 90  B) 180  C) 181  D) 360

  • Which is the longest latitude?

A) Tropic of Cancer  B) Arctic Circle  C) Equator  D) Tropic of Capricorn

  • All meridians of longitude are equal in:

A) Distance between them  B) Length  C) Width  D) Temperature

  • The Sun is directly overhead on the Tropic of Cancer on:

A) March 21  B) June 21  C) September 23  D) December 22

  • The Sun is directly overhead on the Tropic of Capricorn on:

A) March 21  B) June 21  C) September 23  D) December 22

  1. The Prime Meridian passes through which observatory?

A) Paris  B) Berlin  C) Greenwich  D) Cape Town

  1. The International Date Line is located at approximately:

A) 0°  B) 90° E  C) 180°  D) 90° W

  1. Crossing the IDL from East to West results in:

A) Gaining a day  B) Losing a day  C) No change  D) Gaining 12 hours

  1. India’s Standard Time is based on which meridian?

A) 75° E  B) 80° E  C) 82.5° E  D) 90° E

  1. IST is ahead of GMT by:

A) 5 hours  B) 5 hours 15 minutes  C) 5 hours 30 minutes  D) 6 hours

  1. The 82.5°E meridian passes through which city?

A) Varanasi  B) Allahabad  C) Mirzapur  D) Lucknow

  1. How many degrees of longitude correspond to 1 hour of time?

A) 10°  B) 12°  C) 15°  D) 20°

  1. How much time difference does 1° of longitude represent?

A) 1 minute  B) 2 minutes  C) 4 minutes  D) 6 minutes

  1. The Tropic of Cancer passes through how many Indian states?

A) 6  B) 7  C) 8  D) 9

  1. Which of these states does the Tropic of Cancer NOT pass through?

A) Gujarat  B) Bihar  C) Jharkhand  D) Mizoram

  • The Arctic Circle is located at:

A) 23.5° N  B) 45° N  C) 66.5° N  D) 90° N

  • The region between the Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn is called:

A) Frigid Zone  B) Temperate Zone  C) Torrid Zone  D) Polar Zone

  • Which country has the most time zones in the world?

A) USA  B) Canada  C) Russia  D) China

  • Nepal’s time zone (NPT) is ahead of GMT by:

A) 5:00  B) 5:15  C) 5:30  D) 5:45

  • Bangladesh Standard Time (BST) is ahead of IST by:

A) 30 minutes  B) 45 minutes  C) 1 hour  D) 15 minutes

  • The International Meridian Conference that adopted Greenwich as 0° was held in:

A) 1851  B) 1884  C) 1900  D) 1920

  • Which of the following is true about all meridians?

A) They are parallel to each other  B) They are all equal in length  C) They decrease in length toward the equator  D) They run east-west

  • Latitude measures distance:

A) East or West of Prime Meridian  B) North or South of the Equator  C) Above or below sea level  D) East or West of IDL

  • The Midnight Sun phenomenon is associated with which zone?

A) Torrid Zone  B) Temperate Zone  C) Frigid Zone (Polar)  D) Equatorial Zone

  • Which conference established the Prime Meridian at Greenwich?

A) Vienna Conference  B) Paris Agreement  C) International Meridian Conference  D) London Accord

  • The 0° longitude and 0° latitude intersect at a point in which ocean?

A) Pacific Ocean  B) Indian Ocean  C) Arctic Ocean  D) Atlantic Ocean

Answer Key

QAnsQAnsQAns
1B11C21C
2C12A22C
3C13C23D
4C14C24A
5D15C25B
6C16C26B
7B17C27B
8B18C28C
9D19B29C
10C20C30D

Rapid Revision Cheat Sheet – Latitude and Longitude

TopicKey Point to Remember
Latitudes (other name)Parallels – run east-west, horizontal lines
Longitudes (other name)Meridians – run north-south, vertical lines
Total latitudes181 (including 0° Equator)
Total longitudes360 (180E + 180W)
Equator0° – longest latitude – divides N & S hemispheres
Tropic of Cancer23.5°N – Sun overhead on June 21 – 8 Indian states
Tropic of Capricorn23.5°S – Sun overhead on December 22
Arctic Circle66.5°N – Midnight Sun in summer
Antarctic Circle66.5°S – Southern equivalent
Torrid Zone0° to 23.5° N & S – maximum heat
Temperate Zone23.5° to 66.5° N & S – moderate climate, 4 seasons
Frigid Zone66.5° to 90° N & S – polar climate, extreme cold
Prime Meridian0° longitude – Greenwich, England – adopted 1884
IDL~180° longitude – crossing W→E adds a day; E→W removes a day
IST Meridian82.5°E – Mirzapur, UP – IST = GMT + 5:30
Time rule15° longitude = 1 hour; 1° longitude = 4 minutes
Tropic of Cancer states (W→E)Gujarat, Rajasthan, MP, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Tripura, Mizoram
Nepal time offsetGMT + 5:45 (NPT) – 15 min ahead of IST
Bangladesh time offsetGMT + 6:00 (BST) – 30 min ahead of IST
Pakistan time offsetGMT + 5:00 (PKT) – 30 min behind IST
0°,0° intersectionAtlantic Ocean (called ‘Null Island’)
Length of 1° latitude~111 km (constant everywhere)
Length of 1° longitude~111 km at Equator; 0 km at poles
All meridians areEqual in length (unlike parallels which decrease)
Hipparcus contributionFirst to formally propose the 360° lat-long grid (~150 BCE)
Harrison’s Chronometer (1759)Solved the problem of measuring longitude at sea using accurate time
Serial number of this PPT#80 in the Complete Foundation Batch

Conclusion

Latitude and Longitude is one of the most high-yield topics in SSC Geography and it rewards thorough preparation with direct marks. The 91-slide PPT (LEC #2, Serial #80) from the Complete Foundation Batch covers this topic in exceptional depth in bilingual Hindi + English format on slideshareppt.net.

From understanding the basic properties of parallels and meridians, to mastering IST calculations, IDL rules, climate zones, and the coordinates of important cities – every concept in this article directly maps to questions that appear in SSC CGL, CHSL, MTS, GD Constable, and RRB Group D exams. Study the comparison table between latitude and longitude, memorise the 8 states through which the Tropic of Cancer passes, and practice the 30 MCQs in this article to ensure complete command over this topic.

Bookmark this page alongside the PPT for your pre-exam revision. Use the Rapid Revision Cheat Sheet in the final days before your exam for a quick refresh of all key facts.

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