Course Content
UPSC Notes Samples
Full Syllabus Covered | 100% as per Official UPSC Syllabus
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1. Art & Culture Sample
Covered under topic 1. Indian culture will cover the salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature and Architecture from ancient to modern times.
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1. Indian culture will cover the salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature and Architecture from ancient to modern times. (copy)
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2. Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present- significant events, personalities, issues. (copy)
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5. History of the world will include events from the 18th century such as Industrial revolution, World wars, Redrawal of national boundaries, Colonization, Decolonization, Political philosophies like Communism, Capitalism, Socialism etc.- their forms and effect on the society.
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7. Role of women and women’s organizations, Population and associated issues, Poverty and developmental issues, Urbanization, their problems and their remedies.
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10.2. Introduction to Maps
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GS2
All topics that need updates are given below.
2. Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States, issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein.
All topics that need updates are given below.
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5. Parliament and State Legislatures – structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers & privileges and issues arising out of these.
All topics that need updates are given below.
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6. Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary; Ministries and Departments of the Government; pressure groups and formal/informal associations and their role in the Polity.
All topics that need updates are given below.
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12. Welfare schemes for Vulnerable Sections of the Population by the Centre and States and the Performance of these schemes; Mechanisms, Laws, Institutions and Bodies constituted for the Protection and Betterment of these Vulnerable Sections.
All topics that need updates are given below.
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GS3
All topics that need updates are given below.
11. Science and Technology- developments and their applications and effects in everyday life.
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GS3: BIODIVERSITY AND ENVIRONMENT
All topics that need updates are given below.
1. Environment
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GS4
All topics that need updates are given below.
GS3: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
All topics given below
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1. Motion & Measurements
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9. Metals & Non-Metals
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10. Energy
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12. Plant Organisms
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14. Life Processes
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18. Biotechnology
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19. Information Technology
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20. Space Technology
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National & International Current Affairs (CA) 2025
Current affairs of all months are given below
delete UPSC Sample Notes [English]

D.3. Plate Tectonics

  • By, McKenzie and Parker and also Morgan, independently in 1967.
  • A tectonic plate (also called lithospheric plate) is a massive, irregularly-shaped slab of solid rock, generally composed of both continental and oceanic lithosphere.
  • Plates move horizontally over the asthenosphere as rigid units.
  • The lithosphere includes the crust and top mantle with its thickness range varying between 5-100 km in oceanic parts and about 200 km in the continental areas.
  • A plate may be referred to as the continental plate or oceanic plate depending on which of the two occupy a larger portion of the plate.
  • Pacific plate is largely an oceanic plate whereas the Eurasian plate may be called a continental plate.
  • The theory of plate tectonics proposes that the earth’s lithosphere is divided into seven major and some minor plates.
  • Young Fold Mountain ridges, trenches, and/or faults surround these major plates.

Major plates

  1. Antarctica and the surrounding oceanic plate
  2. North American (with western Atlantic floor separated from the South American plate along the Caribbean islands) plate
  3. South American (with western Atlantic floor separated from the North American plate along the Caribbean islands) plate
  4. Pacific plate
  5. India-Australia-New Zealand plate
  6. Africa with the eastern Atlantic floor plate
  7. Eurasia and the adjacent oceanic plate.

Minor plates

  1. Cocos plate: Between Central America and Pacific plate
  2. Nazca plate: Between South America and Pacific plate
  3. Arabian plate: Mostly the Saudi Arabian landmass
  4. Philippine plate: Between the Asiatic and Pacific plate
  5. Caroline plate: Between the Philippine and Indian plate (North of New Guinea)
  6. Fuji plate: North-east of Australia

  • These plates have been constantly moving over the globe throughout the history of the earth.
  • It is not the continent that moves as believed by Wegener.
  • Continents are part of a plate and what moves is the plate.
  • Later discoveries reveal that the continental masses, resting on the plates, have been wandering all through the geological period, and Pangaea was a result of converging of different continental masses that were parts of one or the other plates.
  • Scientists using the palaeo magnetic data have determined the positions held by each of the present continental landmass in different geological periods.
  • Position of the Indian sub- continent (mostly Peninsular India) is traced with the help of the rocks analysed from the Nagpur area.

There are three types of plate boundaries:

  1. Divergent Boundaries
  2. Convergent Boundaries
  3. Transform Boundaries

Divergent Boundaries

  • Where new crust is generated as the plates pull away from each other.
  • The sites where the plates move away from each other are called spreading sites.
  • The best-known example of divergent boundaries is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
  • At this, the American Plate(s) is/are separated from the Eurasian and African Plates.

Convergent Boundaries

  • Where the crust is destroyed as one plate dived under another. (Nepal quack )
  • The location where sinking of a plate occurs is called a subduction zone.
  • There are three ways in which convergence can occur.
  • These are: (i) between an oceanic and continental plate; (ii) between two oceanic plates; and (iii) between two continental plates.

Transform Boundaries

  • Where the crust is neither produced nor destroyed as the plates slide horizontally past each other.
  • Transform faults are the planes of separation generally perpendicular to the mid- oceanic ridges.
  • As the eruptions do not take all along the entire crest at the same time, there is a differential movement of a portion of the plate away from the axis of the earth.
  • Also, the rotation of the earth has its effect on the separated blocks of the plate portions.