No. High altitude winds are certainly strongest in the jets streams, but there is other wind.
Cake recipes only need adjusting for high altitude, not for low altitude.
I don't think they can survive high altitude. Because they are so small, and when you are in a high altitude your not close to ground, and the air around you is different. And picturing my Guinea Pig in a high altitude is scary enough because she is so small, and fragile, too, lol. But, the main point is, guinea pigs probably can't survive in a high altitude, only different creatures.
Altitude Trekking is only used for high mountains like in Himalaya, India. Altitude basically represents the height from the sea level, as u go high, you will trek on more high altitude mountains.
The five major global winds are the trade winds, westerlies, easterlies, polar easterlies, and the jet streams. These winds play a crucial role in determining global weather patterns and circulation of the atmosphere.
streams with low gradients usually move slowly and can't carry bed load dowmstream
Not normally, only if there are high winds or lightning.
The highest altitude or latitude where trees can grow is called the tree line or timberline. This is the point where environmental conditions become too harsh for tree growth, such as low temperatures, high winds, or lack of nutrients. Above this line, only smaller vegetation like shrubs and grasses can survive.
BACON! Bacon is always the answer no matter what.
There is no test that can be done to see if you would suffer from altitude sickness or not. The only way to find out is to climb high, slowly and see how you get on.
Only subtropical high pressure is affected by coriolis force whereas upper air winds (jetstreams) are not affected.
The SR 71 was a very secret high speed, high altitude reconnaisance aircraft. Only 32 were built, at enormous cost.
Southerly winds occur on the trailing side of a high-pressure region because the clockwise flow around the high-pressure system (in the Northern Hemisphere) brings air from the south to fill the void left by the outward movement of air from the high pressure. This results in southerly winds blowing towards the high-pressure center.