Pakistan Studies 2059 · O Level

Secondary and tertiary industries

12 practice questions on Secondary and tertiary industries, with worked solutions and instant marking.

Refer to Fig. 9, the map of southern Pakistan. Its key indicates the international boundary, provincial boundary and river. Fig. 9 also has the labels A, B, C and D.

May/June 2016

Fig. 4.1 presents a map of the location of selected textile industries in Pakistan. The key shows: major textile centre; other textile centre; cotton; international boundary; province-level boundary; disputed boundary. The map labels show: JAMMU & KASHMIR disputed territory; Arabian Sea; a north arrow; and a scale of 0 100 200 300 km.

May/June 2018

This question covers employment and tourism in Pakistan.

May/June 2019

Look at Fig. 4.1, a pie chart that shows the percentage share of Pakistan’s fertiliser production by province-level area. Use the key to complete Fig. 4.1. Key text: Punjab 55%, Sindh 30%, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 10%, all other 5%.

May/June 2021

Study Fig. 4.1, a diagram that shows where the main products of some of Pakistan’s major industries are intended to go. Complete Fig. 4.1 by drawing arrows to link each type of industry with the correct product and its main destination. One example is already filled in. Fig. 4.1 contains boxes with text: Types of industry: crafts; sports goods; iron and steel; surgical instruments. Products: needles/scalpels/scissors; carpets/rugs; footballs/cricket bats; metal rolls/bars/tubes/wires/sheets. Destinations: export market; domestic market; domestic and export market.

May/June 2023

Give the name of one major cotton-industry centre, A or B.

Oct/Nov 2015

Study Fig. 2, a flow diagram showing the cement industry. Several arrows point towards a factory, one of which is labelled "coal". A separate arrow leaving the factory is labelled "cement".

Oct/Nov 2017

Refer to Fig. 3.1, a map that indicates where Sialkot is situated, in Pakistan, where sports goods are manufactured. Fig. 3.1 key includes: international boundary; province-level boundary; disputed boundary. The map names Islamabad, Sialkot, Multan, Afghanistan, Iran, India, China, Jammu and Kashmir (disputed territory) and the Arabian Sea.

Oct/Nov 2019

Fig. 3.1 presents a map of part of the urban area of Karachi, with location X indicated. Fig. 3.2 shows a photograph of a tourist area near Karachi. Two opinions are given: View A says “Pakistan could develop more large-scale manufacturing industries to increase GDP.” View B says “Pakistan could develop tourism further to increase GDP.”

Oct/Nov 2022

Fig. 5.1 presents a divided bar graph of international tourism revenue in 2017 for different world regions, shown as a percentage of the world total. The key includes: Americas, Africa, Middle East, Asia-Pacific, Europe.

Oct/Nov 2023

Examine Fig. 5.1, a divided bar graph showing the percentage of total employment in different sectors in Pakistan in 2009 and 2019.

Oct/Nov 2024

Fig. 4.1 (Insert) shows a photograph of a brick production site in Pakistan. Fig. 4.2 (Insert) shows a map of an industrial estate in an urban area of Pakistan.

Oct/Nov 2025