IAS Prelims Geography Q.5–2025 | Atmospheric Dust & Latitudinal Belts

Authentic Classroom Explanation by IAS Monk


📌 Question

Consider the following statements:

Statement I: The amount of dust particles in the atmosphere is more in subtropical and temperate areas than in equatorial and polar regions.

Statement II: Subtropical and temperate areas have less dry winds.

Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?
(a) Both Statement I and Statement II are correct and Statement II explains Statement I
(b) Both Statement I and Statement II are correct but Statement II does not explain Statement I
(c) Statement I is correct but Statement II is not correct
(d) Statement I is not correct but Statement II is correct

✅ Correct Answer: (c) Statement I is correct but Statement II is not correct


🎯 Theme of the Question

Physical Geography | Atmosphere | Dust Particles | Planetary Wind Belts

This is a conceptual climatology question, testing understanding of winds, aridity, and dust distribution rather than mere facts.


🧠 Classroom Explanation

Dust particles in the atmosphere are influenced by:

  • Dryness of surface
  • Strength of winds
  • Vegetation cover
  • Rainfall frequency

Let us evaluate both statements carefully.


🟢 Statement I

The amount of dust particles is more in subtropical and temperate areas than in equatorial and polar regions.

✔️ Correct

Why?

  • Subtropical regions (20°–35° latitudes) host:
    • Deserts (Sahara, Arabian, Australian)
    • Semi-arid lands
  • These regions experience:
    • Sparse vegetation
    • Loose, dry soil
    • Frequent wind action

➡️ Result: High dust availability and suspension

In contrast:

  • Equatorial regions:
    • Heavy rainfall washes dust out (wet deposition)
    • Dense vegetation binds soil
  • Polar regions:
    • Snow and ice cover
    • Very limited loose material

Hence, dust concentration is lower there.


🔴 Statement II

Subtropical and temperate areas have less dry winds.

Incorrect

In fact, the opposite is true.

  • Subtropical regions are dominated by:
    • Trade winds
    • Westerlies
    • Descending air of subtropical high-pressure belts
  • These winds are:
    • Dry
    • Strong
    • Efficient dust carriers

📌 Examples:

  • Harmattan winds (West Africa)
  • Dust storms in Central Asia
  • Westerlies carrying dust across continents

So Statement II is factually wrong.


🧮 UPSC Assertion–Reason Logic

  • Statement I → ✔️ Correct
  • Statement II → ❌ Incorrect

👉 Option (c) is the only logically consistent answer.


🧠 Memory Hook

“Dust loves DRY + WINDY zones”

  • Dry land → loose particles
  • Wind → suspension & transport
  • Rain + vegetation → dust killers

🔍 Curiosity Corner

Did you know?

  • Saharan dust travels:
    • Across the Atlantic
    • Reaches the Amazon Basin
    • Supplies nutrients like phosphorus to rainforests 🌱

UPSC may indirectly test this via:

Dust → Climate → Biogeochemical cycles


📘 Enrichment Note

Factors controlling atmospheric dust:

  1. Aridity
  2. Wind velocity
  3. Vegetation cover
  4. Rainfall intensity
  5. Human activity (ploughing, mining)

This question tests Factor 1 + 2 together.


🎯 Prelims Strategy Insight

  • In assertion–reason type questions:
    • Never assume symmetry
    • Read Statement II independently
  • UPSC often traps by reversing causation words like:
    • more / less
    • dry / moist

🧩 One-Line Ready Recall

More dust = Dry land + Strong winds, not rainfall-rich zones.


🧭 IAS Monk Whisper
What rain washes away, wind proudly carries across continents.

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