Pakistan Studies 2059 · O Level

Internal transport

7 practice questions on Internal transport, with worked solutions and instant marking.

Refer to Fig. 2, which presents the changes in road type in Pakistan over a 15-year span. Finish the pie chart for 2013-14 by using the information below and the key supplied: Metalled 73% Unmetalled 27%

May/June 2017

Fig. 1.1 shows a map of southern and western Pakistan. The map key identifies an international boundary, a province-level boundary, a river, a mountain range and a city. The map text names Balochistan Plateau, River Indus and Arabian Sea. The places marked are U and V.

May/June 2022

Fig. 5.1 presents a map of rail networks in southern and western Pakistan. It shows a north arrow marked N, a scale bar reading 0, 100, 200, 300 km, and the country names AFGHANISTAN, IRAN and INDIA. The Arabian Sea is labelled beside the southern coastline. The map labels the following places and stations: Peshawar, Sargodha, Dera Ghazi Khan, Bahawalpur, Khanewal, Khanpur, Rohri, Nawabshah, Mirpur Khas, Hyderabad Kotri, Karachi Cantt, Larkana, Sukkur, Jacobabad, Sibi and Quetta. The key indicates: a filled circle for 'station'; a double line for 'main line'; a single line for 'branch line'; and a dashed line for 'international boundary'. Fig. 5.2 is a pie chart headed 'percentage of Pakistan’s imports by continent'. The circle is marked with percentages at 0%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80% and 90%. The legend headed 'Continent' includes: Asia, Europe, Americas, Africa and Oceania, each shown with a different shading.

May/June 2024

This question concerns transport systems in Pakistan.

May/June 2025

Study Fig. 5; it shows a map of southern Pakistan.

Oct/Nov 2017

Study Fig. 4.1, a map of Pakistan’s rail network. The key shows: international boundary; province-level boundary; disputed boundary; rail network. The map includes the labels: AF GHANISTAN, IRAN, INDIA, JAMMU & KASHMIR (disputed territory), Arabian Sea, Quetta, Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Islamabad, Chitral. Name the three provinces X, Y and Z.

Oct/Nov 2018

Study Fig. 4.1, a map showing Pakistan’s road network. Fig. 4.1 key includes: international boundary; province-level boundary; disputed boundary; major highway; other roads; motorway. The map marks A and B.

Oct/Nov 2019