IB DP · Thinka 原創模擬試題

2023 IB DP Geography 模擬試題連答案詳解

Thinka May 2023 HL (TZ2) IB Diploma Programme-Style Mock — Geography

88 195 分鐘2023
An original Thinka practice paper modelled on the structure and difficulty of the May 2023 HL (TZ2) IB Diploma Programme Geography paper. Not affiliated with or reproduced from IB.

卷一 - Option A (Freshwater)

Answer all parts of Question 1 and either Option 2(a) or 2(b).
5 題目 · 20
題目 1 · Data analysis
1
The table below shows drainage basin characteristics for four sub-catchments (A, B, C, and D) within a river basin:

| Sub-catchment | Basin Area (km²) | Total Stream Length (km) |
|---|---|---|
| Sub-catchment A | 120 | 240 |
| Sub-catchment B | 80 | 120 |
| Sub-catchment C | 200 | 500 |
| Sub-catchment D | 150 | 150 |

Identify which sub-catchment has the highest drainage density.
查看答案詳解

解題

To find the drainage density, use the formula:

\(\text{Drainage Density} = \frac{\text{Total Stream Length}}{\text{Basin Area}}\)

Calculating the drainage density for each sub-catchment:
- Sub-catchment A: \(240 / 120 = 2.0 \text{ km/km}^2\)
- Sub-catchment B: \(120 / 80 = 1.5 \text{ km/km}^2\)
- Sub-catchment C: \(500 / 200 = 2.5 \text{ km/km}^2\)
- Sub-catchment D: \(150 / 150 = 1.0 \text{ km/km}^2\)

Sub-catchment C has the highest drainage density of \(2.5 \text{ km/km}^2\).

評分準則

Award [1] mark for identifying "Sub-catchment C" (or simply "C"). No partial marks.
題目 2 · Data analysis
1
Analysis of a storm hydrograph for a localized flash flood event shows that the peak rainfall intensity occurred at 14:00 hours, and the peak river discharge was recorded at 17:30 hours. State the lag time for this drainage basin event.
查看答案詳解

解題

Lag time is defined as the time interval between peak rainfall and peak river discharge.

- Peak rainfall time: 14:00 hours
- Peak discharge time: 17:30 hours
- Calculation: \(17:30 - 14:00 = 3 \text{ hours and } 30 \text{ minutes}\) (which is equivalent to \(3.5 \text{ hours}\) or \(210 \text{ minutes}\)).

評分準則

Award [1] mark for stating any of the following correct values:
- "3 hours 30 minutes" (or "3 hours and 30 minutes")
- "3.5 hours"
- "210 minutes"
題目 3 · short_answer
2
Outline one physical characteristic of a drainage basin that leads to a flashy storm hydrograph.
查看答案詳解

解題

To outline a physical characteristic, the response must identify a natural feature of the drainage basin and briefly describe how it contributes to a flashy hydrograph (short lag time, steep rising limb, high peak discharge). Valid physical characteristics include: (1) Steep slopes, which increase the speed of overland flow. (2) Impermeable rocks or clay soils, which prevent infiltration and increase surface runoff. (3) A circular basin shape, which ensures water from all parts of the basin reaches the main stream at similar times. (4) High drainage density, which means water has less distance to travel overland before entering a channel.

評分準則

Award 1 mark for identifying a valid physical drainage basin characteristic (e.g., steep slopes, impermeable rock, circular basin shape, high drainage density, or sparse vegetation). Award 1 mark for explaining/outlining how this leads to a flashy hydrograph (e.g., by increasing surface runoff velocity, reducing infiltration, or shortening the lag time). Note: Do not accept human characteristics such as urbanization or deforestation.
題目 4 · Explanation
6
Explain how three distinct human activities can modify the shape of a storm hydrograph.
查看答案詳解

解題

Human activities can significantly alter the hydrological processes in a drainage basin, thereby modifying the storm hydrograph in the following ways:

1. **Urbanization**: The construction of roads, buildings, and tarmac creates impermeable surfaces. This prevents infiltration and increases surface runoff (overland flow). Combined with artificial drainage systems (like gutters and storm sewers) that transport water rapidly to the river, this results in a **steeper rising limb, a shorter lag time, and a higher peak discharge**.

2. **Deforestation**: Removing forest cover reduces interception by leaves and branches, as well as water loss through transpiration. With less vegetation to absorb water, more precipitation reaches the soil directly, leading to rapid saturation and increased surface runoff. This increases the **peak discharge and shortens the lag time**.

3. **Channelization / River Engineering**: Straightening, widening, or lining river channels with concrete reduces friction and increases velocity. This speeds up the movement of water through the basin, which **shortens the lag time and increases the peak discharge downstream**, while potentially making the falling limb steeper as water drains away more rapidly.

*(Alternative valid human activities could include afforestation, reservoir/dam construction, or agricultural drainage, provided they are explained with correct hydrological terminology and linked to hydrograph characteristics.)*

評分準則

For each of the three human activities:
- Award **1 mark** for identifying a valid human activity that affects the drainage basin.
- Award **1 mark** for explaining the hydrological mechanism and linking it directly to a change in the hydrograph's shape (e.g., peak discharge, lag time, rising limb, falling limb).

**Example breakdown:**
- **Activity 1 (Urbanization)**: Identifies concrete/impermeable surfaces (1 mark) and explains that this reduces infiltration, leading to a shorter lag time or higher peak discharge (1 mark).
- **Activity 2 (Deforestation)**: Identifies tree removal (1 mark) and explains that this reduces interception/evapotranspiration, causing faster runoff and a steeper rising limb (1 mark).
- **Activity 3 (Channelization/Dams)**: Identifies channel straightening/lining (1 mark) and explains how this increases velocity, reducing lag time downstream (1 mark). Alternatively, identifies dam construction (1 mark) and explains how it regulates flow, lowering peak discharge (1 mark).

*Maximum 6 marks total.*
題目 5 · Evaluative Essay
10
To what extent are non-structural flood mitigation strategies more effective than structural measures in managing flood risk within a named drainage basin?
查看答案詳解

解題

To structure this 10-mark essay: 1. **Introduction**: Define structural (e.g., dams, levees, channelization) and non-structural (e.g., afforestation, floodplain zoning, wetland restoration, preparation/forecasting) flood mitigation. Introduce the chosen drainage basin (e.g., the Kissimmee River, Florida, or the River Rhine, Europe). State the thesis: while non-structural strategies are more ecologically sustainable and cost-effective in the long term, they must often be integrated with existing structural interventions to provide comprehensive flood security. 2. **Body Paragraph 1: Evaluation of Structural Measures**: Discuss the chosen basin's reliance on structural engineering. For example, in the Kissimmee River, channelization (C-38 canal built in the 1960s) successfully controlled flooding but destroyed 12,000-14,000 hectares of wetlands, degraded water quality, and severely impacted biodiversity. In other basins like the Mississippi, levees create a 'levee effect', encouraging risky floodplain development and increasing downstream peak discharge. 3. **Body Paragraph 2: Evaluation of Non-structural Measures**: Discuss the implementation of non-structural measures. In the Kissimmee Basin, the Kissimmee River Restoration Project (KRRP) de-channelized parts of the river, reflooding historic wetlands. This natural storage reduced nutrient runoff (improving water quality in Lake Okeechobee) and restored ecosystem services. Evaluate other non-structural measures like floodplain zoning or early warning systems in the Rhine basin, which reduce vulnerability without altering the river system. 4. **Critical Comparison / Synthesis**: Assess the limitations of non-structural options (e.g., high cost of land buyback, political resistance from landowners, inability to protect existing highly urbanized areas) versus the limitations of structural options (e.g., high maintenance costs, eventual failure risks). 5. **Conclusion**: Provide a justified final judgment on 'to what extent'. Conclude that non-structural strategies are increasingly seen as superior for sustainable, basin-wide management, but a hybrid, integrated drainage basin management (IDBM) approach remains necessary where extensive human settlement already exists.

評分準則

Assessment Criteria for 10-mark Essay:
- Level 1 (1-3 marks): Explains flood mitigation measures in a general sense. Descriptions are superficial with little or no link to a named drainage basin. Confuses structural and non-structural methods.
- Level 2 (4-6 marks): Describes both structural and non-structural strategies. Includes some mention of a named drainage basin, though the details may be generic. The evaluation of effectiveness is basic or one-sided.
- Level 3 (7-8 marks): Explains and compares structural and non-structural flood mitigation measures using clear, appropriate examples from a named drainage basin. Evaluates the relative effectiveness of both types of strategies. The argument is structured and begins to address the 'to what extent' aspect of the prompt.
- Level 4 (9-10 marks): Demonstrates detailed, accurate, and relevant geographical knowledge of a named drainage basin. Critically evaluates both structural and non-structural measures with a balanced, nuanced perspective. Reaches a clear, well-supported conclusion that directly answers 'to what extent' (e.g., highlighting the need for an integrated approach).

卷一 - Option D (Geophysical Hazards)

Answer all parts of Question 7 and either Option 8(a) or 8(b).
5 題目 · 20
題目 1 · Short Answer
1
Analyze the table below which shows selected volcanic eruptions, their recorded plume heights (km), and their Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) values:

| Volcanic Eruption | Plume Height (km) | VEI |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Mt. Pinatubo (1991) | 35 | 6 |
| Mt. St. Helens (1980) | 19 | 5 |
| Mt. Ontake (2014) | 11 | 3 |
| Eyjafjallajökull (2010) | 9 | 4 |

Identify the eruption that represents an anomaly to the general trend where a higher VEI value is associated with a higher plume height.
查看答案詳解

解題

Looking at the general trend, as the Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) increases, the plume height also increases:
- VEI 3 (Mt. Ontake) has a plume height of 11 km.
- VEI 4 (Eyjafjallajökull) has a plume height of 9 km.
- VEI 5 (Mt. St. Helens) has a plume height of 19 km.
- VEI 6 (Mt. Pinatubo) has a plume height of 35 km.

Eyjafjallajökull is the anomaly because it has a higher VEI value (4) than Mt. Ontake (3), but a lower plume height (9 km compared to 11 km).

評分準則

Award [1] for identifying "Eyjafjallajökull" (accept "Eyjafjallajökull (2010)" or "Mt. Eyjafjallajökull").
題目 2 · Short Answer
1
A GIS hazard-mapping agency uses the following criteria to map zones of volcanic lahar risk:
- **Zone X**: Areas within 15 km of the volcanic summit located along river valleys (High Risk)
- **Zone Y**: Areas between 15 km and 30 km from the volcanic summit located along river valleys (Moderate Risk)
- **Zone Z**: All elevated ridge areas, or any area more than 30 km from the volcanic summit (Low Risk)

Based on these criteria, state the risk zone (Zone X, Zone Y, or Zone Z) in which a village situated on an elevated ridge 12 km from the volcanic summit is located.
查看答案詳解

解題

Although the village is only 12 km from the volcanic summit (which falls within the <15 km distance range of Zone X), it is located on an "elevated ridge". According to the criteria, "All elevated ridge areas" are classified as Zone Z (Low Risk) regardless of their distance from the summit, as lahars flow down river valleys.

評分準則

Award [1] for "Zone Z" (accept "Zone Z (Low Risk)" or "Low Risk").
題目 3 · Outline
2
Outline how a jokulhlaup (glacial outburst flood) is generated by volcanic activity.
查看答案詳解

解題

A jokulhlaup is initiated when subglacial geothermal heat or a volcanic eruption melts the underside of an overlying glacier, creating a large volume of meltwater. This water accumulates in a subglacial lake until the hydrostatic pressure becomes high enough to lift the ice dam or breach the glacial barrier, resulting in a sudden and devastating release of water, ice, and sediment downstream.

評分準則

Award 1 mark for outlining the melting process (e.g., volcanic heat/eruption melting the base of a glacier to create a reservoir of meltwater). Award 1 mark for outlining the release mechanism (e.g., water pressure breaching the ice dam or lifting the ice barrier, leading to a sudden, rapid discharge downstream).
題目 4 · Explanation
6
Explain how three different human activities can increase the risk of mass movements on slopes.
查看答案詳解

解題

Human activities can destabilize slopes by altering their physical properties, weight, or hydrological state. Here are three key ways this occurs:

1. **Deforestation and Vegetation Removal:**
Removing trees and vegetation for agriculture or timber destabilizes the soil. Root networks act as natural anchors that bind the soil together, and plants transpire moisture out of the ground. When cleared, the soil loses its mechanical strength and becomes saturated more quickly during rainfall events, increasing pore water pressure and leading to slope failure.

2. **Slope Modification and Construction (Excavation):**
When roads, railways, or buildings are constructed in mountainous areas, developers often cut into the base (toe) of a slope. This removes the lateral support holding up the upper slope. Additionally, adding heavy structures onto the top of the slope (crest) increases the shear stress (loading), making it more likely to collapse under gravity.

3. **Artificial Water Inputs (Irrigation and Drainage Leaks):**
Agricultural practices involving intensive irrigation, or leaking municipal water and sewage pipes, introduce excessive water into the slope material. This increases the weight of the slope and raises the pore water pressure between soil particles. The water acts as a lubricant, reducing friction (shear strength) and triggering landslides or mudflows.

評分準則

For each of the three explained human activities, award up to 2 marks:
- **1 mark** for identifying a valid human activity that affects slope stability.
- **1 mark** for a detailed explanation of the physical mechanism (e.g., changes in pore water pressure, shear strength, shear stress, or removal of support) by which this activity increases mass movement risk.

**Example 1:**
- *Identification (1 mark):* Deforestation or clearing land for agriculture.
- *Explanation (1 mark):* This removes root networks that bind the soil together and increases water saturation, raising pore pressure and triggering slides.

**Example 2:**
- *Identification (1 mark):* Cutting into slopes to build roads/infrastructure.
- *Explanation (1 mark):* This steepens the slope profile and removes support at the toe of the slope, making the upper section gravitationally unstable.

**Example 3:**
- *Identification (1 mark):* Excessive agricultural irrigation or leaking water pipes.
- *Explanation (1 mark):* This introduces extra water, which increases the weight of the slope material and reduces friction by increasing pore water pressure.

*Note: Maximum of 6 marks total.*
題目 5 · essay
10
Discuss the effectiveness of pre-event management strategies compared with post-event response strategies in reducing the vulnerability of communities to seismic hazards.
查看答案詳解

解題

Introduction
Seismic hazards, including earthquakes and secondary hazards like tsunamis and liquefaction, present significant risks to human populations. Vulnerability refers to the conditions determined by physical, social, economic, and environmental factors that increase the susceptibility of a community to the impact of hazards. Managing these risks involves a combination of proactive, pre-event mitigation and reactive, post-event response strategies.

Pre-event Management Strategies
These strategies aim to reduce the vulnerability of a population before an event occurs. Key approaches include:

  • Aseismic Engineering and Building Codes: Designing structures to absorb seismic energy (e.g., base isolators, cross-bracing). This is highly effective at reducing casualties, as seen in Tokyo or Christchurch. However, retrofitting older structures is extremely expensive.
  • Land-Use Planning and Zoning: Preventing high-density developments on hazardous ground (e.g., soft clays prone to liquefaction or steep slopes prone to landslides).
  • Community Preparedness and Education: Regular drills (e.g., Japan's Disaster Prevention Day) and education ensure citizens know how to react, reducing panic and immediate injuries.
  • Early Warning Systems: While earthquake prediction is not yet possible, technology can detect primary waves to give seconds of warning to shut down gas lines and stop trains, while tsunami warning systems provide critical evacuation time.

Post-event Response Strategies
These strategies focus on saving lives and managing the immediate and long-term aftermath:

  • Search and Rescue (SAR): Immediate response in the 'golden hours' (first 24–72 hours) to rescue survivors trapped under collapsed buildings.
  • Emergency Relief and Aid: Provision of medical aid, clean water, food, and temporary shelter to prevent secondary deaths from disease or exposure (critical in disasters like Haiti 2010).
  • Reconstruction and 'Building Back Better': Long-term recovery presents an opportunity to rebuild infrastructure to higher safety standards, transforming a post-event response into future pre-event mitigation.

Evaluation and Synthesis
The effectiveness of these strategies is strongly linked to a country's level of economic development (GDP/GNI) and governance:

  • In High-Income Countries (HICs), significant investment in pre-event management (e.g., Chile 2010, Tohoku 2011) dramatically reduces death tolls despite high-magnitude events. Post-event response in these contexts is well-organized and fast.
  • In Low-Income Countries (LICs), a lack of capital often results in poor enforcement of building codes and lack of preparedness. Consequently, these regions rely heavily on international post-event aid, which is often reactive, slower, and cannot compensate for weak infrastructure (e.g., Haiti 2010).

Conclusion
Ultimately, pre-event management is far more effective at achieving a sustained, long-term reduction in physical vulnerability. However, because seismic events cannot be prevented, post-event strategies will always remain necessary. For the most vulnerable populations, improving pre-event resilience is the only way to break the cycle of disaster and dependency on external post-event aid.

評分準則

[Level 1: 1–3 marks]
The response is descriptive and may only focus on one side of the argument (either pre- or post-event). Highly generalized descriptions of earthquakes or general disasters are used with little or no focus on vulnerability or specific management strategies. There is no clear structure or evaluation.

[Level 2: 4–6 marks]
The response explains both pre-event and post-event strategies with some level of detail. There is an attempt to link these strategies to the concept of vulnerability. Case study examples may be mentioned (e.g., Japan, Haiti) but are descriptive rather than analytical. The evaluation is present but may be unbalanced or lack depth.

[Level 3: 7–10 marks]
The response provides a balanced and well-structured evaluation of both pre-event and post-event strategies. There is an explicit, clear focus on how these strategies reduce physical, social, or economic vulnerability. Appropriate, detailed geographic terminology and case studies are used effectively to support the argument. The essay arrives at a well-reasoned, evaluative conclusion.

卷一 - Option G (Urban Environments)

Answer all parts of Question 13 and either Option 14(a) or 14(b).
6 題目 · 26
題目 1 · Data analysis
1
Refer to the following data showing the air temperature (°C) recorded at 23:00 hours along a west-to-east transect of a city:

* Rural West: 18.2 °C
* Suburb West: 19.8 °C
* Commercial Centre: 24.5 °C
* Urban Park: 21.1 °C
* Suburb East: 20.2 °C
* Rural East: 17.5 °C

Calculate the temperature range (in °C) across this transect.
查看答案詳解

解題

To calculate the temperature range, subtract the lowest temperature recorded from the highest temperature recorded.

* Highest temperature (Commercial Centre) = 24.5 °C
* Lowest temperature (Rural East) = 17.5 °C

\( \text{Range} = 24.5 - 17.5 = 7.0 \text{ °C} \)

評分準則

Award 1 mark for the correct calculation: 7 °C or 7.0 °C (accept 7).
題目 2 · Graph skills
1
The table below shows the relationship between the distance from the Central Business District (CBD) in kilometers and the average residential land value (in USD per square meter) in a city:

| Distance from CBD (km) | Average Land Value (USD/m²) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 1200 |
| 3 | 850 |
| 5 | 400 |
| 7 | 250 |
| 9 | 150 |
| 11 | 120 |

Describe the relationship between distance from the CBD and average land value shown in the table.
查看答案詳解

解題

The data shows a clear trend: at 1 km from the CBD, the land value is at its highest (1200 USD/m²), and it decreases steadily at each subsequent distance interval, reaching its lowest value (120 USD/m²) at 11 km. This is a negative (or inverse) relationship.

評分準則

Award 1 mark for stating that there is a negative / inverse relationship, OR for describing the trend (as distance increases, land value decreases).
題目 3 · Short Answer
2
Outline two ways in which green infrastructure can reduce the urban heat island (UHI) effect.
查看答案詳解

解題

Green infrastructure, such as urban forests, green roofs, and parks, reduces the urban heat island (UHI) effect in two main ways:

1. **Evapotranspiration**: Plants absorb water through their roots and release it as water vapor through their leaves. This process cools the air temperature by converting sensible heat (which we feel as warmth) into latent heat.
2. **Shading**: Large tree canopies provide shade over concrete, buildings, and asphalt surfaces. This prevents these high-thermal-mass materials from absorbing and storing solar radiation during the day and radiating it back into the urban environment at night.

評分準則

Award [1 mark] for each valid outlined way, up to a maximum of [2 marks].

* **Way 1 (Evapotranspiration)**: Award [1 mark] for identifying vegetation cooling via evapotranspiration/moisture release.
* **Way 2 (Shading/Albedo)**: Award [1 mark] for identifying that vegetation shades surfaces, preventing heat absorption/storage, or that green roofs increase albedo compared to dark roofs.

*Note: To receive [1 mark] for each point, the student must move beyond simple identification (e.g., 'planting trees') and outline *how* it reduces the heat (e.g., 'by providing shade that blocks solar radiation').*
題目 4 · Explanation
6
Explain three distinct ways in which green infrastructure can mitigate the urban heat island (UHI) effect in cities.
查看答案詳解

解題

Green infrastructure (such as parks, bioswales, green roofs, and street trees) cools cities through three main mechanisms:

1. **Evapotranspiration**: Unlike artificial surfaces, plants absorb water from the soil and release it into the atmosphere as water vapor. This process of transition from liquid water to gas absorbs latent heat from the surrounding environment, thereby lowering ambient air temperatures.

2. **Shading of Urban Surfaces**: Tree canopies and dense vegetation act as physical barriers that intercept incoming shortwave solar radiation. This prevents surfaces with high thermal capacity (such as concrete, brick, and asphalt) from absorbing, storing, and later re-radiating heat into the urban atmosphere.

3. **Albedo Modification (Reflectivity)**: Vegetation typically has a higher albedo (reflectivity) than dark-colored impervious urban surfaces (such as asphalt roads or traditional rooftops). By reflecting a larger proportion of incoming solar radiation back into space rather than absorbing it, green infrastructure reduces the overall thermal energy accumulated within the urban fabric.

評分準則

Award up to 2 marks for each well-explained way, up to a maximum of 6 marks.

In each case:
- Award 1 mark for identifying a valid process/mechanism of green infrastructure (e.g., evapotranspiration, shading, increased albedo, or reduced energy use for air conditioning).
- Award 1 mark for explaining how this process actively reduces the urban heat island effect (e.g., connecting shading to the prevention of heat storage in high-thermal-mass materials like concrete).

**Example responses:**
- **Evapotranspiration [1 mark]**: Plants release moisture into the air, which absorbs latent heat from the surroundings and cools the local climate [1 mark].
- **Shading [1 mark]**: Tree canopies block sunlight from reaching dark asphalt roads, preventing them from absorbing heat during the day and radiating it at night [1 mark].
- **Albedo [1 mark]**: Grass and plants reflect more solar energy than dark roof tiles, meaning less heat is trapped in the urban environment in the first place [1 mark].
題目 5 · Explanation
6
Explain three distinct ways in which green infrastructure can mitigate the urban heat island (UHI) effect in cities.
查看答案詳解

解題

Green infrastructure cools urban environments through three key processes:

1. **Evapotranspiration**: Vegetation absorbs water through roots and releases it as vapor. This physical process absorbs latent heat from the atmosphere, lowering ambient air temperatures.
2. **Shading**: Trees and vegetative structures intercept shortwave solar radiation, preventing materials like concrete and asphalt from storing heat during the day and re-radiating it at night.
3. **Increased Albedo**: Living green surfaces have a higher reflectivity (albedo) than dark asphalt or concrete, meaning more solar energy is reflected back into space rather than absorbed as thermal energy.

評分準則

Award up to 2 marks for each of three distinct points:
- 1 mark for identifying a valid process/mechanism (e.g., evapotranspiration, shading, albedo, reduced building energy demand).
- 1 mark for explaining how it reduces urban heat (linking the mechanism to temperature reduction or reduced heat absorption).
- Maximum 6 marks total.
題目 6 · Evaluative Essay
10
Discuss the effectiveness of urban planning strategies in mitigating the negative impacts of the urban heat island (UHI) effect in one or more named cities.
查看答案詳解

解題

Introduction: Define the UHI effect as the phenomenon where urban areas experience significantly warmer temperatures than their surrounding rural counterparts due to human activities, building materials with high thermal mass, and lack of vegetation. Identify key strategies to mitigate this, such as green infrastructure, high-albedo materials, and building geometry design. Main Body Paragraph 1: Green Infrastructure. Focus on urban forestry and green roofs. Explain how evapotranspiration and shading reduce local ambient temperatures. Example: Singapore's 'City in a Garden' vision or Chicago's City Hall green roof. Evaluation: High initial costs and maintenance, but highly effective at reducing stormwater runoff and local heat. Main Body Paragraph 2: Cool Surfaces / Albedo Modification. Focus on reflective pavements and light-colored roofs. Example: New York City's 'CoolRoofs' initiative or Los Angeles painting streets with cool sealants. Evaluation: Cost-effective and easy to implement, but can cause glare at street level and does not address waste heat from air conditioning. Main Body Paragraph 3: Urban Canopy and Wind Corridors. Focus on building heights and spacing to allow wind flow to disperse heat. Example: Stuttgart's green ventilation corridors or Hong Kong's Air Ventilation Assessments. Evaluation: Highly effective for coastal/breezy cities but extremely difficult to retrofit in established, high-density historic urban centers. Conclusion: Synthesize the arguments. Conclude that while individual strategies are helpful, a holistic, multi-faceted approach integrated into municipal zoning laws is required. Success is heavily influenced by the financial capacity of the city (HIC vs. LIC context).

評分準則

Level 1 (1-3 marks): The response is descriptive and general. It may define the UHI effect but shows limited or no understanding of specific urban planning strategies. Case studies are absent or generic. Level 2 (4-6 marks): The response describes some planning strategies (e.g., planting trees, painting roofs white) with limited evaluation. A case study is mentioned but lacks specific details or depth. Focus is more descriptive than evaluative. Level 3 (7-8 marks): The response explains a range of planning strategies with a clear link to how they mitigate the UHI effect. Specific, named city case studies are utilized effectively. There is a clear attempt to evaluate the effectiveness and limitations of these strategies. Level 4 (9-10 marks): The response provides a balanced, well-structured, and detailed evaluation of multiple strategies. Excellent integration of case study details. The synthesis explores broader geographic themes, such as the challenges of retrofitting old cities versus planning new ones, or the socio-economic disparities in strategy implementation.

Paper 3 - HL Global Perspectives Essay

Answer one complete question consisting of part (a) and part (b).
2 題目 · 28
題目 1 · essay
12
Analyze how the physical infrastructure of global networks shapes the spatial distribution of global hubs.
查看答案詳解

解題

Introduction
Global hubs are nodes that possess intensive connectivity, serving as points of convergence for global flows of capital, goods, people, and information. The spatial distribution of these hubs is fundamentally shaped by the physical infrastructure of global networks, which includes digital networks (undersea fiber-optic cables), transport networks (shipping lanes, deep-water ports, and air transport corridors), and energy networks (pipelines and electricity grids). These physical pathways create uneven geography by concentrating connectivity and power in specific locations while bypassing others.

Physical Infrastructure of Digital Networks
Undersea fiber-optic cables carry over 95% of international data. The spatial layout of these cables dictates which cities become global digital hubs. For instance, cities like New York, London, Tokyo, and Singapore are landing points for major trans-oceanic cables. This physical infrastructure provides ultra-low latency connections, which is a critical requirement for high-frequency financial trading. Consequently, the physical pathways of these cables reinforce the dominance of established global financial hubs, while landlocked or remote countries (such as Bolivia or Chad) are marginalized due to the lack of direct submarine cable infrastructure.

Physical Transport Infrastructure (Maritime and Aviation)
Maritime shipping networks depend heavily on critical physical infrastructure, including strategic chokepoints (e.g., the Strait of Malacca, Suez Canal) and artificial deep-water ports. Global manufacturing and logistics hubs, such as Shenzhen and Shanghai, have developed specifically because of their deep-water port infrastructure capable of handling mega-container ships (like Triple-E class vessels). Similarly, aviation networks require massive physical hub-and-spoke infrastructure (e.g., Dubai International Airport, Heathrow, or Singapore Changi). These airports act as physical gateways, channeling flows of highly skilled migrants, tourists, and high-value freight, thereby establishing these cities as global hubs of economic and cultural activity.

Physical Energy Infrastructure
Global energy networks, consisting of oil and gas pipelines and transnational electrical grids, concentrate wealth and industrial activity at key distribution and refining nodes. Hubs like Rotterdam or Houston have grown as global petrochemical and logistics hubs due to their massive physical pipeline infrastructure and storage facilities, illustrating how energy conduits shape regional and global economic landscapes.

Conclusion
The spatial distribution of global hubs is not accidental; it is highly dependent on the physical infrastructure of global networks. By channeling flows of data, goods, and energy through specific physical corridors, this infrastructure creates a highly uneven global core-periphery pattern, reinforcing the economic power of connected hubs while isolating peripheral regions.

評分準則

Markbands (12 marks total):

  • Level 1 (1–4 marks): The response is mainly descriptive and lacks a clear focus on the relationship between physical infrastructure and global hubs. It may list transport or communication networks without analyzing how they shape the spatial distribution of hubs. Terminology is basic and examples are absent or highly generalized.
  • Level 2 (5–8 marks): The response explains some ways in which physical infrastructure (such as shipping lanes, airports, or internet cables) relates to global hubs. Examples are included but may be treated as a list rather than integrated analytically. There is a basic understanding of how infrastructure concentrates flows in certain places, but the analysis is uneven or lacks depth.
  • Level 3 (9–12 marks): The response provides a clear, well-structured, and balanced analysis of how different forms of physical infrastructure (e.g., digital, transport, energy) shape the spatial distribution of global hubs. It uses precise geographical terminology and integrates well-chosen, detailed case studies or real-world examples (e.g., specific cities, ports, or cable networks). It successfully shows how physical networks create a geography of uneven development and connectivity.
題目 2 · Evaluative Essay
16
Discuss the extent to which the expansion of global financial and communication networks has weakened the sovereignty of nation-states. [16 marks]
查看答案詳解

解題

To achieve a high mark, essays should be structured logically with a clear introduction, balanced body paragraphs using geographical case studies, and a synthetic conclusion.

Introduction:
- Define key terms: 'sovereignty' (the supreme authority of a state over its territory and domestic affairs) and 'global networks' (the interconnected financial and communication channels that facilitate the flow of capital, ideas, and information across borders).
- State a clear thesis: while these networks bypass national boundaries and pose severe challenges to state authority, states are not powerless and have increasingly adapted to regulate and reassert control over these networks.

Arguments that networks have weakened sovereignty:
- Financial Networks: The rise of global capital flows, transnational corporations (TNCs), and offshore financial centres (e.g., the Cayman Islands or Switzerland) makes it difficult for states to collect corporate taxes, leading to tax evasion. The actions of credit rating agencies or international financial institutions (like the IMF) can dictate the domestic economic policies of sovereign nations (e.g., structural adjustment programs).
- Communication Networks: The decentralized nature of the internet and global social media platforms (e.g., Meta, X/Twitter, TikTok) allows ideas, political movements, and misinformation to spread globally without state mediation (e.g., the role of social media in the Arab Spring or global climate movements). Cyber warfare and digital surveillance by foreign actors or private tech monopolies undermine state security and control.

Arguments that state sovereignty remains robust or is being reasserted:
- Digital Borders and Regulation: States have demonstrated their power to regulate the digital sphere. Examples include the 'Great Firewall of China', which blocks foreign websites to maintain political control, and the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which forces global tech conglomerates to adhere to state-enforced privacy laws.
- Economic Adaptability: Sovereign states still hold monopoly power over lawmaking, physical border controls, and military forces. Some nations are actively countering global financial networks by developing sovereign digital currencies (e.g., China's e-CNY) or implementing national tariffs and protectionist policies (e.g., US-China trade tensions).
- Rise of Nationalism: The resurgence of nationalist and populist movements globally shows a political drive to reclaim sovereignty from globalizing forces.

Conclusion:
- Synthesize the arguments. Rather than a simple 'weakening' of sovereignty, global networks have transformed how sovereignty is exercised. States are transitionally shifting from absolute border-control to acting as powerful regulators of these global flows.

評分準則

Markband Breakdown (out of 16 marks):

Level 1 (1–4 marks):
- Response is largely descriptive and lacks a clear focus on the question.
- Demonstrates limited knowledge of global financial or communication networks.
- Lacks structure and geographical examples.

Level 2 (5–8 marks):
- Describes some impacts of networks on state power, but the discussion is one-sided or superficial.
- Only mentions either financial or communication networks, but not both in depth.
- Includes basic examples, but lacks critical evaluation of 'the extent' of weakened sovereignty.

Level 3 (9–12 marks):
- Explains both financial and communication networks and their impacts on state sovereignty.
- Offers a balanced discussion showing both the erosion of state power and some ways states reassert themselves.
- Supported by relevant geographic examples (e.g., TNCs, tax havens, internet censorship, or the GDPR).
- Shows a clear, structured argument with a logical conclusion.

Level 4 (13–16 marks):
- Provides a sophisticated, highly evaluative essay addressing the 'extent' to which sovereignty is weakened.
- Synthesizes complex ideas, demonstrating that sovereignty is transformed rather than simply lost.
- Supported by detailed, contemporary, and accurate case studies/examples.
- Well-written, using precise geographical terminology throughout.

想知道自己有幾分把握?

Thinka 是 DSE 學生用的 AI 練習應用程式,有無限量練習題、即時自動批改和詳細解題步驟。逾 100,000 名學生用它確認自己真的識,而不只是「以為識」。

想練更多類似題型?在 Thinka 無限量操練,即時知道答案。

免費開始練習