Yes, provided you can jump or fly. You just can't CLIMB any higher.
ELK MOUNTAIN!!! It's right around clark summit in the Endless mountain range. I go there every weekend!!!
You start at Shaymin village. Then start climbing the mountain there are 9 stations in total. You can use the Drifloon to go down the mountain if needed. After the last station there is the Summit Pass then the Summit.
Most often, the air at higher elevations is cooler than the air at lower elevations. The act of your climbing the mountain has no effect on it.
Higher than what? As you go up a mountain the air pressure gets lower simply because there is less air above you weighing down on you.
You mean fizz? ok whatever... because diet pepsi is better... duhhh... :)
Temperatures decrease with altitude due to a decrease in air pressure as you go higher. This causes the air to expand and cool down, hence making it colder at the top of a mountain compared to the base.
Not only is gravity working against you on the way up, but also the air pressure is higher, so it takes more effort for your lungs to expand hence making breathing more difficult as you progress up the mountain.
A mountain because the higher in air you go the more higher air pressure gets. this is not part of the anwser but, G-force is pressure on arollar coaster when u get higher.
Red is at the summit of Mt. Silver. The higher you go up, it starts to snow and hail, and you know you are getting closer.
Mount Everest is called the roof of the world because its the highest summit, you can not go any higher.
Edmund Hillary's goal while climbing Mount Everest was to have a good go at reaching the summit with Tenzing Norgay. He knew there were things in his way high up on the mountain but he was determined to find a successful route to the summit.
A person weighs less on top of a mountain because the force of gravity is slightly weaker at higher elevations compared to the Earth's surface. This is due to the greater distance from the center of the Earth and the gravitational pull being slightly weaker at higher altitudes.