Answers for Mapping - IELTS Reading Test

International English Language Testing System ( IELTS )

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Avleen Kaur

Avleen KaurSr. Executive Training

Updated on Nov 26, 2024 15:51 IST

Practising the "Mapping" reading passage is crucial as it fosters the development of vital abilities in recognizing important information, comprehending geographical concepts, and effectively organizing data. The text highllights on how mapmaking has changed throughout time, from antiquated techniques to contemporary technological innovations like satellite navigation. It demonstrates how scientific approaches have led to advancements in mapmaking, with contemporary technologies making mapping more precise and accessible. This kind of passage frequently asks students to relate particular information to more general concepts, which improves their comprehension of difficult texts and helps them provide appropriate answers to questions—skills crucial for IELTS Reading.

IELTS Mapping Reading Answers 

The passage below "Mapping" is inspired by Reading Practice Test. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, based on the reading passage.

Mapping IELTS Reading Passage

A. Today, the mapmaker's vision is no longer confined to what the human eye can see. The perspective of mapmaking has shifted from the crow's nest of the sailing vessel, mountain top and airplane to 'new orbital heights. Radar, which bounces microwave radio signals off a given surface to create images of its contours and textures, can penetrate jungle foliage and has produced the first maps of the mountains of the planet Venus. And a combination of sonar and radar produces charts of the seafloor, putting much of Earth on the map for the first time. ‘Suddenly it's a whole different world for US,’ says Joel Morrison, chief of geography at the U.S. Bureau of the Census, ‘Our future as mapmakers - even ten years from now - is uncertain.’

B. The world's largest collection of maps resides in the basement of the Library of Congress in Washington, D.c. The collection, consisting of up to 4,6 million map sheets and 63,000 atlases, includes magnificent bound collections of elaborate maps- the pride of the golden age of Dutch cartography*. In the reading room scholars, wearing thin cotton gloves to protect the fragile sheets, examine ancient maps with magnifying glasses. Across the room people sit at their computer screens, studying the latest maps, with their prodigious memories, computers are able to store data about people, places and environments - the stuff of maps - and almost instantly information is displayed on the screen in the desired geographic context, and at the dick of a button, a print-out of the map appears.

C .Measuring the spherical Earth ranks as the first major milestone in scientific cartography. This was first achieved by the Greek astronomer Eratosthenes, a scholar at the famous Alexandrian Library in Egypt in the third century BC. He calculated the Earth's circumference as 25,200 miles, which was remarkably accurate. The longitudinal circumference is known to be 24,860 miles.

D. Building on the ideas of his predecessors, the astronomer and geographer Ptolemy, working in the second century AD, spelled out a system for organizing maps according to grids of latitude and longitude. Today, parallels of latitude are often spaced at intervals of 10 to 20 degrees and meridians** at 15 degrees, and this is the basis for the width of modern time zones. Another legacy of Ptolemy's is his advice to cartographers to create maps to scale. Distance on today's maps is expressed as a fraction or ratio of the real distance. But mapmakers in Ptolemy's time lacked the geographic knowledge to live up to Ptolemy's scientific principles. Even now, when surveyors achieve accuracies down to inches and satellites can plot potential missile targets within feet, maps are not true pictures of reality.

E. However, just as the compass improved navigation and created demand for useful charts, so the invention of the printing press in the 15th century put maps in the hands of more people, and took their production away from monks, who had tended to illustrate theology rather than geography. Ocean-going ships launched an age of discovery, enlarging both what could and needed to be mapped, and awakened an intellectual spirit and desire for knowledge of the world.

F. Inspired by the rediscovered Ptolemy, whose writing had been preserved by Arabs after the sacking of the Alexandrian Library in AD 931, mapmakers in the 15th century gradually replaced theology with knowledge of faraway places, as reported by travelling merchants like Marco Polo.

G. Gerhardus Mercator, the foremost shipmaker of the 16th century, developed a technique of arranging meridians and parallels in such a way that navigators could draw straight lines between two points and steer a constant compass course between them. This distortion formula, introduced on his world map of 1569, created the ‘Greenland problem’. Even on some standard maps to this day, Greenland looks as large as South America - one of the many problems when one tries to portray a round world on a flat sheet of paper. But the Mercator projection was so practical that it is still popular with sailors.

H. Scientific mapping of the land came into its own with the achievements of the Cassini family- father, son, grandson and great-grandson. In the late 17th century, the Italian - born founder, Jean-Dominique, invented a complex method of determining longitude based on observations of Jupiter's moons. Using this technique, surveyors were able to produce an accurate map of France. The family continued to map the French countryside arid his great-grandson finally published their famous Cassini map in 1793 during the French Revolution. While it may have lacked the artistic appeal of earlier maps, it was the model of a social and geographic map showing roads, rivers, canals, towns, abbeys, vineyards, lakes and even windmills. With this achievement, France became the first country to be completely mapped by scientific methods.

I. Mapmaking has come a long way since those days. Today's surveyors rarely go into the field without being linked to navigation satellites. Their hand-held receivers are the most familiar of the new mapping technologies, and the satellite system, developed and still operated by the US Defense Department, is increasingly used by surveyors. Even ordinary hikers, sailors and explorers can tap into it for data telling them where they are. Simplified civilian versions of the receivers are available for a few hundred dollars and they are also the heart of electronic map displays available in some cars. Cartography is pressing on to cosmic frontiers, but its objective is, and always has been, to communicate a sense of ‘here’ in relation to ‘there’, however far away ‘there’ may be.

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Mapping IELTS Practice Questions

Questions 1-7

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?

In boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet, write

TRUE if the statement agrees with the information

FALSE  if the statement contradicts the information

NOT GIVEN  if there is no information on this

1. Due to technological advancements, maps of previously unreachable areas can now be produced.

Answer: TRUE
Answer location: Paragraph A
Explanation: The text asserts that radar and sonar technologies have enabled the mapping of previously inaccessible regions like the seafloor and Venus' highlands.

2. Morrison argues that mapping technology will soon come to a standstill.

Answer: FALSE
Answer location: Paragraph A
Explanation:  Morrison states that the future of mapmaking is uncertain, even ten years from now, suggesting that advancements in mapping technology will continue rather than come to a standstill.

3. Locations above ground, such mountain tops, are mapped using sonar technology.

Answer: NOT GIVEN
Explanation: The passage mentions radar is used for mapping above-ground areas like mountain tops, while sonar is specifically mentioned for mapping the seafloor. Since the use of sonar for mapping mountain tops is not addressed in the text, it falls under Not Given.

4. Researchers examine the most recent maps through magnifying glasses at the Library of Congress.

Answer: FALSE
Answer location: Paragraph B
Explanation:  The text states that researchers use magnifying glasses to examine ancient maps, not the most recent ones. The latest maps are studied on computer screens.

5. Only researchers in the reading room at the Library of Congress have access to the technology that prints maps.

Answer: NOT GIVEN
Explanation: The text mentions that a print-out of the map can be produced at the click of a button, but it does not specify whether this technology is only available to researchers in the reading room. Therefore, this information is not provided.

6. In the third century BC, Eratosthenes calculated the spherical Earth.

Answer: TRUE
Answer location: Paragraph C
Explanation: Eratosthenes made a significant turning point in scientific mapping by determining the Earth's circumference, thereby confirming the spherical Earth's existence.

7. Eratosthenes' estimate of the circumference of the Earth was significantly astray.

Answer: FALSE
Answer location: Paragraph C
Explanation: Paragraph C mentions that Eratosthenes' estimate of the Earth's circumference was "remarkably accurate," not significantly astray. This suggests his calculation was quite close to the actual value.








Mapping IELTS Questions & Answers

Questions 8-13

The Reading Passage has sections A-I.

Which section contains the following information?

Write the correct A-I letter on your answer sheet in boxes 8-13.

8. Mapmaking is now more accessible to the general public because of satellite technology.

Answer: Paragraph I
Explanation: Satellite technology, like GPS, has made mapmaking more accessible to the general public, enabling modern surveyors and hikers to use navigation and mapping for their needs.

9. Navigators can draw straight paths between two points using the Mercator projection.

Answer: Paragraph G
Explanation: Gerhardus Mercator's 16th-century invention enabled navigators to draw straight lines between points and maintain a steady compass course, enabling the practical application of maps in navigation.

10. The printing press's development increased the public's access to maps.

Answer: Paragraph E
Explanation: According to this text, maps became more widely available to the public when the printing press was developed in the fifteenth century.

11. Using scientific means, France was the first nation to be entirely mapped.

Answer: Paragraph H
Explanation: With the Cassini family's groundbreaking method of measuring longitude and charting the land, France became the first to be fully mapped using scientific methods.

12. At the Library of Congress, maps are analyzed and presented using contemporary technologies.

Answer: Paragraph B
Explanation: Researchers use computers to study modern maps, while magnifying glasses are used to study old maps at the Library of Congress.

13. Latitude and longitude coordinate space is the basis for contemporary time zones.

Answer: Paragraph D
Explanation: Ptolemy's latitude and longitude grid system, which established modern time zones, used parallels of latitude at 10-20 degrees and meridians at 15 degrees.







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Tajkia Sultana

7 months ago

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Rahul Singha

7 months ago

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TOM Titus

12 months ago

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Rahul Singha

10 months ago

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Rahul Singha

a year ago

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Aditi

a year ago

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Rahul Singha

a year ago

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