CLASS VIII QUESTION BANK - 5. Coal and Petroleum
CLASS VIII QUESTION BANK - 5. Coal and Petroleum
CLASS VIII QUESTION BANK - 5. Coal and Petroleum
MCQ
2. Coal is processed in industries to get some useful products. Which of the following is not obtained from coal?
b) The disadvantage of natural gas is that it cannot be used directly for burning in homes.
PARAGRAPH BASED
About 300 million years ago, earth had dense forests. Due to natural processes like flooding, the forests got buried under
the soil. As more soil deposited over them, they got compressed. Under high pressure and high temperature, dead plants
got slowly converted to coal. The slow process of conversion of dead vegetation into coal is called carbonization. Coal is
made up of dead remains of vegetation and is called a fossil fuel.
(i) Slow conversion of wood into coal by biochemical processes extending over millions of years is called:
For question two statements are given- one labeled Assertion (A) and the other labeled Reason (R). Select the correct
answer to these questions from the codes (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) as given below
ii) Both A and R are true but R is not the correct explanation of the assertion.
1. Assertion- A bicycle can be slowed down by dragging your feet along the ground.
Reason- When we drag our feet in the ground, the force of friction acts between our feet and the ground.
SA (3 MARKS)
1. Write one point of difference between exhaustible and inexhaustible natural resources. Give two examples each.
b) We say fossil fuels will last only for a few hundred years. Comment
4. Write any three the tips we must follow to save petrol/ diesel/natural gas while driving?
6. Name and write the characteristic of the products formed when coal is subjected to destructive distillation.
LA (5 MARKS)
1. How is petroleum mined? What is the principle of refining petroleum? Name four important products obtained during
this refining.
b) Write any four measures for the judicious use of fossil fuels?
4. What are the characteristics of coal? Name the products formed after coal is processed in the industry. Also write the
uses of the products formed.
6. a) Manu was heating oil to fry potato chips. The cooking oil all of a sudden caught fire; he poured water to extinguish
the fire. Do you think this action was suitable? If yes,why? If not, why not? In such a condition what should Manu have
done?
b) Name the four reserves of Natural gas in India.
c) Write one application of Natural gas.
ANSWERS
MCQ
1. a) carbon dioxide
2. d) CNG
PARAGRAPH BASED
(ii) c) Sunlight
(iii) Carbonisation is the conversion of organic matter to carbon containing product. Coal mainly contains carbon. Thus,
the conversion of dead vegetation into coal is called carbonisation.
(iv) Coal is formed from the dead remains of living organisms (fossils). So, it is known as fossil fuels.
ASSERTION-REASONING
SA (3 MARKS)
1. Exhaustible natural resource - The resources are present in limited quantity in nature and are likely to be exhausted by
human activities. Examples of these resources are forests, wildlife, minerals, coal, petroleum, natural gas etc.
Inexhaustible natural resource - The resources are present in unlimited quantity in nature and are not likely to be
exhausted by human activities. Examples are: sunlight, air.
2. a) i) Anthracite
ii) Lignite
b) Fossil fuels will last only for a few hundred years because fossil fuels are exhaustible natural resource, which are
present in limited quantity in nature.
Uses: It is one of the fuels used to cook food. Earlier it was used in railway engines to produce steam to run the engine. It
is used as fuel in thermal power plants to produce electricity and in various other industries. (any two)
LA (5 MARKS)
1. Petroleum was formed from organisms living in the sea. As these organisms died, their bodies settled at the bottom of
the sea and got covered with layers of sand and clay. Over millions of years, absence of air, high temperature and high
pressure transformed the dead organisms into petroleum and natural gas. The petroleum deposits are usually found mixed
with salt water. The petroleum is lighter than salt water, and hence, floats over it.
The process of separating the various constituents/ fractions of petroleum is known as refining. It is carried out in a
petroleum refinery.
Products obtains during refining of petroleum are LPG, Petrol, Diesel, Kerosene, Lubricating oil, Paraffin wax, bitumen.
(any four)
2. Refer to Table 5.1 Various constituents of petroleum and their uses on pg 60 NCERT Class VIII science.
3. a) Sunlight is present in unlimited quantity in nature and is not likely to be exhausted by human activities. So, it is an
inexhaustible natural resource. Whereas petrol takes million of years to form.
Coal is processed in industry to get some useful products such as coke, coal tar and coal gas. Uses of these products are as
follows.
Coke- Coke is used in the manufacture of steel and in the extraction of many metals.
Coal tar- Products obtained from coal tar are used as starting materials for manufacturing various substances used in
everyday life and in industry, like synthetic dyes, drugs, explosives, perfumes, plastics, paints, photographic materials,
roofing materials, etc.
Coal gas- It is used as a fuel in many industries situated near the coal processing plants.
5. a) Refining means purification of a crude substance.
Petroleum is a mixture of various constituents such as petroleum gas, petrol, diesel, lubricating oil, paraffin wax, etc. The
process of separating the various constituents/ fractions of petroleum is known as refining. It is carried out in a petroleum
refinery.
b) Although wood has a very high calorific value, we still discourage its use as a fuel because:
1.Wood release unburnt carbon particles. These fine particles are dangerous pollutants causing respiratory diseases such
as asthma.
2. Incomplete combustion of wood give carbon monoxide gas which is a very poisonous gas and pollute the air.
3. Combustion of fuels like wood releases carbon dioxide in the environment causes global warming (rise in the
temperature of the atmosphere).
b) Natural gas has been found in Tripura, Rajasthan, Maharashtra and in the Krishna Godavari delta.
c) Natural gas is also used as a starting material for the manufacture of a number of chemicals and fertilisers