Journey to the End of the Earth Class 12 MCQ Quiz – Test Your Knowledge!

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Are you prepared to test your understanding of "Journey to the End of the Earth" from the Class 12 English Vistas textbook? This MCQ quiz will help you revise key concepts, including climate change, Antarctica’s significance, and the author’s experiences.

About the Quiz

  • Chapter Name: Journey to the End of the Earth
  • Author: Tishani Doshi
  • Subject: English (Vistas)
  • Book: NCERT Class 12 English
  • Question Type: Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)
  • Leaderboard: Yes (Check Your Rank!)

Why Take This Quiz?

Boosts your CBSE board exam preparation
Covers key themes like climate change and geography
Helps with understanding the author’s perspective on Antarctica
Track your score on the leaderboard

Click Below to Start the Quiz!

Journey to the End of the Earth

1 / 15

You lose all earthly sense of perspective and time here. The visual scale ranges from the microscopic to the mighty: midges and mites to blue whales and icebergs as big as countries (the largest recorded was the size of Belgium). Days go on and on and on in surreal 24-hour austral summer light, and a ubiquitous silence, interrupted only by the occasional avalanche or calving ice sheet, consecrates the place. It’s an immersion that will force you to place yourself in the context of the earth’s geological history. And for humans, the prognosis isn’t good.

Four people give a reason for the author’s feeling while traveling.

Choose the option that correctly summarizes it based on your understanding of the extract.

2 / 15

What characterizes Tishani Doshi's writing style in Journey to the End of the Earth?

3 / 15

You lose all earthly sense of perspective and time here. The visual scale ranges from the microscopic to the mighty: midges and mites to blue whales and icebergs as big as countries (the largest recorded was the size of Belgium). Days go on and on and on in surreal 24-hour austral summer light, and a ubiquitous silence, interrupted only by the occasional avalanche or calving ice sheet, consecrates the place. It’s an immersion that will force you to place yourself in the context of the earth’s geological history. And for humans, the prognosis isn’t good.

Choose the option listing the elements that influence one to think of earth’s physicality.

  1. breakage of an iceberg from a glacier
  2. midges and mites
  3. a regularly seen avalanche
  4. summer light in the Southern Hemisphere

4 / 15

‘Take care of the small things and the big things will take care of themselves.’

Choose the option stating the significance of this statement depending on the textual context.

5 / 15

What is the primary goal of the Students on Ice program?

6 / 15

Students on Ice, the programme I was working with on the Shokalskiy, aims to do exactly this by taking high school students to the ends of the world and providing them with inspiring educational opportunities which will help them foster a new understanding and respect for our planet. It’s been in operation for six years now, headed by Canadian Geoff Green, who got tired of carting celebrities and retired, rich, curiosity-seekers who could only ‘give’ back in a limited way. With Students on Ice, he offers the future generation of policymakers a life-changing experience at an age when they’re ready to absorb, learn, and most importantly, act.

Choose the option that marks the ODD ONE OUT based on your reading of the above extract.

7 / 15

What makes Antarctica a "doorway to the past"?

8 / 15

You lose all earthly sense of perspective and time here. The visual scale ranges from the microscopic to the mighty: midges and mites to blue whales and icebergs as big as countries (the largest recorded was the size of Belgium). Days go on and on and on in surreal 24-hour austral summer light, and a ubiquitous silence, interrupted only by the occasional avalanche or calving ice sheet, consecrates the place. It’s an immersion that will force you to place yourself in the context of the earth’s geological history. And for humans, the prognosis isn’t good.

Select the option that correctly fits the category of ‘microscopic to the mighty’ out of the ones given below.

  1. trace of a skin cell: trace of a bird’s egg
  2. a grain of rice: field of wheat
  3. a scoop of ice cream: an ice cream cone
  4. a drop of water: Pacific Ocean

9 / 15

What makes Antarctica unique compared to other places on Earth?

10 / 15

What are the consequences of global warming on Antarctica's ecosystems?

11 / 15

Why does Geoff Green include high school students in the Students on Ice expedition?

12 / 15

What is the relevance of the statement "Take care of the small things and the big things will take care of themselves" in the context of the Antarctic environment?

13 / 15

You lose all earthly sense of perspective and time here. The visual scale ranges from the microscopic to the mighty: midges and mites to blue whales and icebergs as big as countries (the largest recorded was the size of Belgium). Days go on and on and on in surreal 24-hour austral summer light, and a ubiquitous silence, interrupted only by the occasional avalanche or calving ice sheet, consecrates the place. It’s an immersion that will force you to place yourself in the context of the earth’s geological history. And for humans, the prognosis isn’t good.

The ‘visual scale’ refers to

14 / 15

Students on Ice, the programme I was working with on the Shokalskiy, aims to do exactly this by taking high school students to the ends of the world and providing them with inspiring educational opportunities which will help them foster a new understanding and respect for our planet. It’s been in operation for six years now, headed by Canadian Geoff Green, who got tired of carting celebrities and retired, rich, curiosity-seekers who could only ‘give’ back in a limited way. With Students on Ice, he offers the future generation of policymakers a life-changing experience at an age when they’re ready to absorb, learn, and most importantly, act.

Students on Ice is …………. headed by Geoff Green.

Select the option to fill in the blank correctly.

15 / 15

Students on Ice, the programme I was working with on the Shokalskiy, aims to do exactly this by taking high school students to the ends of the world and providing them with inspiring educational opportunities which will help them foster a new understanding and respect for our planet. It’s been in operation for six years now, headed by Canadian Geoff Green, who got tired of carting celebrities and retired, rich, curiosity-seekers who could only ‘give’ back in a limited way. With Students on Ice, he offers the future generation of policy-makers a life-changing experience at an age when they’re ready to absorb, learn, and most importantly, act.

Which of the following would NOT be a life-changing experience?

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The average score is 73%

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Pos.NameScoreDurationPoints
1nav93 %2 minutes 40 seconds14
2Namrata93 %2 minutes 43 seconds14
3m87 %6 minutes 24 seconds13
4G80 %5 minutes 46 seconds12
5ADAM JOSHUA80 %7 minutes 29 seconds12
6Chirag80 %16 minutes 51 seconds12
7Khushi73 %2 minutes 23 seconds11
8V73 %5 minutes 26 seconds11
9avnish73 %6 minutes 40 seconds11
10Y73 %8 minutes 16 seconds11
11Yashashwee73 %9 minutes 19 seconds11
12Smruti73 %10 minutes 54 seconds11
13gurpreet kaur67 %11 minutes 28 seconds10
14vasanaa67 %13 minutes 48 seconds10
15keerthi67 %14 minutes 37 seconds10
16RT60 %5 minutes 2 seconds9
17krish maurya60 %6 minutes 43 seconds9
18Ritu60 %6 minutes 43 seconds9
19R53 %5 minutes 3 seconds8

Key Topics Covered in the Quiz

Tishani Doshi’s journey to Antarctica
Effects of climate change on Earth
Importance of Antarctica in scientific research
Life and geography of the coldest continent

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Also See:  My Mother at Sixty Six MCQs | Class 12 English Quiz with Answers

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