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File: 1432455607596.jpg (192 KB, 800x600, 4:3, grandteton.jpg__800x600_q8….jpg)

 No.850

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/most-mountains-dont-come-pointy-peaks-180955378/

If you asked someone to draw a mountain, they'd likely sketch a mass wtih a series of pointy spikes. But a study published this week in Nature Climate Change suggests that mountain peaks may in fact hide the larger range's true form. Paul Elsen, a grad student at Princeton University, and Morgan Tingley, a researcher at the University of Connecticut, wanted to dig deeper into mountain topography. So, they examined satellite data from 182 mountain ranges around the world, looking at how the amount of land area changed with elevation.

With a classic, cartoon-like peak, you'd expect the land area to get smaller and smaller as you go higher and higher. But most of the most of the ranges — 68 percent to be exact — didn't do that. Instead, as elevation climbed, a small fraction actually had more area, almost like a reverse pyramid. Some had an hourglass shape, with less area at mid-elevation, and others took more of a diamond shape, carrying most of their area in the middle.

The team wasn't totally surprised by their results. “I did expect that we’d see some patterns that were not this classic pyramid, [but] I had no idea that pyramid mountains would be the exception to the rule," Elsen, who got interested in the subject while doing fieldwork in the Himalayas told The Washington Post's Chelsea Harvey.



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