Economic Geography MCQs set 2 for PPSC Zilladar (Revenue) Geography — 20 solved questions.
Q1. A textile unit must move dyed cloth to Karachi port. Which inland industrial city is widely linked to Punjab cotton and textile chains?
Answer: Faisalabad as a core textile hub
Explanation: Faisalabad (formerly Lyallpur) is Pakistan's third-largest city and the hub of its cotton textile industry, earning it the nickname "Manchester of Pakistan" for its dense concentration of spinning mills, weaving units, and dyeing factories. Skardu, Gwadar, and Murree are tourist or fishing destinations with no significant textile manufacturing base.
Q2. A student maps the world’s largest proven oil reserves by country. Which state most often tops textbook lists in the 2020s?
Answer: Venezuela with very large proved oil reserves
Explanation: Venezuela holds the world's largest proved conventional oil reserves, estimated at over 300 billion barrels according to OPEC and BP Statistical Review data through the 2020s, primarily in the Orinoco Heavy Oil Belt. Iceland, Switzerland, and Bhutan have negligible or no significant petroleum reserves.
Q3. The Industrial Revolution began with textile mechanization fueled by coal in which country nucleus?
Answer: Britain’s coal-fields and Midlands workshops
Explanation: The Industrial Revolution originated in Britain during the late 18th century, driven by coal-powered mechanisation in textile mills, particularly in the Midlands and northern England, along with innovations such as the steam engine and iron manufacturing.
Q4. Pakistan earns foreign exchange partly by exporting Himalayan pink rock salt mined mainly near which Punjab town?
Answer: Jhelum
Explanation: The Khewra Salt Mine, the world's second largest salt mine, is located in the Khewra town of the Jhelum district in Punjab, Pakistan. The pinkish hue of the rock salt comes from trace iron oxide minerals, and the mine has been commercially exploited since the Mughal era.
Q5. Pakistan�s largest freshwater lake supports inland fisheries valued in Sindh�s rural economy north of Karachi. Which lake is this?
Answer: Manchar Lake
Explanation: Manchar Lake in Sindh's Dadu and Jamshoro districts is Pakistan's largest natural freshwater lake, fed by the Indus River and the Aral and Manchhar canals, and supports extensive fishing communities. Haleji and Keenjhar are smaller Sindh lakes, while Karambar and Satpara are high-altitude lakes in Gilgit-Baltistan.
Q6. The Indus Water Treaty gives Pakistan rights mainly to the western rivers. Which river below is NOT one of those western rivers?
Answer: Ravi
Explanation: Under the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, Pakistan received exclusive rights to the three western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab), while India received rights to the three eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej). The Ravi, being an eastern river, was allocated to India, meaning it is not among Pakistan's western rivers under the treaty.
Q7. The Khyber Pass historically linked Peshawar with which land route trade hub across the border?
Answer: Kabul
Explanation: The Khyber Pass, cutting through the Spin Ghar (Safed Koh) range at about 1,070 m, has been the principal land route linking Peshawar in Pakistan's northwest to Kabul, the Afghan capital, for millennia. Tehran, Tashkent, and Urumqi lie much farther beyond Afghanistan and were not the immediate destination at the western end of the pass.
Q8. Which mountain hosts Pakistan�s major ski resort and also draws summer tourism revenue for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa?
Answer: Malam Jabba
Explanation: Malam Jabba in Swat District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, is Pakistan's primary ski resort, operating on the slopes of the Hindu Kush ranges and also attracting summer trekking visitors. Nanga Parbat, Tirich Mir, and Rakaposhi are famous peaks for high-altitude mountaineering but do not host developed ski resort infrastructure.
Q9. Which pair best matches a major hydel dam with the river it mainly impounds in Pakistan?
Answer: Tarbela on Indus
Explanation: Tarbela Dam, completed in 1976, is built on the Indus River in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and remains one of the world's largest earth-filled dams by structural volume. Mangla Dam is on the Jhelum River, not the Chenab, making the Tarbela-Indus pairing the only correct match among the options.
Q10. Which province holds the largest share of Pakistan�s documented proven coal reserves especially lignite to bituminous seams?
Answer: Sindh
Explanation: Sindh holds Pakistan's largest documented coal reserves, primarily in the Thar coalfield, which contains an estimated 175 billion tonnes of lignite - one of the world's largest known coal deposits. While Punjab and Balochistan also have coal, Sindh's Thar reserves far exceed all other provinces combined.
Q11. The Indus delta shrank after which barrage cut off most Indus flow to the sea and changed coastal agriculture and fisheries?
Answer: Kotri Barrage
Explanation: Kotri Barrage (also called Ghulam Muhammad Barrage), built in 1955 near Hyderabad, is the last major barrage on the Indus before the sea; it diverts most remaining river flow into irrigation canals, drastically reducing freshwater reaching the delta.
Q12. Karachi Port mainly handles containerized manufactured exports. Which product group is a classic example?
Answer: Ready-made garments and textiles
Explanation: Pakistan is one of the world's major exporters of ready-made garments and textiles, which form the backbone of its manufacturing export sector and pass through Karachi Port in containerized shipments to global markets. The textile value chain from cotton growing in Punjab and Sindh to spinning, weaving, and garment manufacturing is Pakistan's largest industrial employer.
Q13. Which city is widely called the Manchester of Pakistan because of dense cotton spinning and weaving?
Answer: Faisalabad
Explanation: Faisalabad is called the "Manchester of Pakistan" due to its vast concentration of textile mills producing cotton yarn and woven fabric, mirroring the role Manchester played in England's Industrial Revolution. Multan is known for handicrafts and Sufi shrines, Quetta is the capital of Balochistan, and Sialkot is famous for surgical instruments and sportswear.
Q14. Pakistan imports most of its edible palm oil used in food industry mainly from which world region?
Answer: Southeast Asia
Explanation: Pakistan imports the vast majority of its edible palm oil from Southeast Asia, principally Malaysia and Indonesia, which together account for roughly 85% of global palm oil production. Scandinavia, the Andes, and the Arctic have climates unsuitable for oil palm cultivation.
Q15. The Sui gas field underpins much of Pakistan�s fertilizer and power feedstock in which province?
Answer: Balochistan
Explanation: The Sui gas field, discovered in 1952, is located in Dera Bugti district of Balochistan and has historically supplied the majority of Pakistan's natural gas for fertiliser production and power generation. Balochistan hosts several major gas fields despite being the country's least developed province.
Q16. Chile is a world price-setter students often pair with which metal critical to wiring and industry?
Answer: Copper
Explanation: Chile is the world's largest copper producer, accounting for roughly 25-30% of global output, with major mines such as Escondida and Chuquicamata in the Atacama Desert. Copper is essential for electrical wiring, electronics, and industrial machinery, making Chile a dominant price-setter on global commodity markets.
Q17. Australia�s Pilbara is famous globally for bulk exports of which input to steel plants?
Answer: Iron ore
Explanation: Australia's Pilbara region in Western Australia holds some of the world's richest iron ore deposits, mined in vast quantities at sites like Hamersley Range, and exported primarily to China, Japan, and South Korea for steel production.
Q18. Brazil is a classic reference economy for which globally traded soft commodity still tested in papers?
Answer: Coffee
Explanation: Brazil is the world's largest producer and exporter of coffee, a position it has held for over a century, with the states of Minas Gerais, São Paulo, and Espírito Santo forming the main producing regions.
Q19. The Malacca Strait is vital to Japan and South Korea because most of their imported oil transits from which broader region?
Answer: Middle East
Explanation: Japan and South Korea import the vast majority of their crude oil from Middle Eastern producers such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iraq, and Kuwait, and almost all of those tankers must pass through the Strait of Malacca. This makes the strait one of the world's most strategically critical chokepoints for Northeast Asian energy security.
Q20. Which channel separates oil-rich Middle Eastern exporters from Iran and is a key tanker route into the Gulf?
Answer: Strait of Hormuz
Explanation: The Strait of Hormuz, located between Oman and Iran, is the only sea passage linking the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and onward to the Arabian Sea; it is the world's most strategically important oil chokepoint, through which roughly 20% of global petroleum trade passes.