no, some are grassy, dry, and some just plain cold!
Not all the mountains have snow.
No, not all mountains have snow caps. The presence of snow caps depends on factors such as elevation, latitude, and climate. Mountains in higher latitudes or with higher elevations are more likely to have snow caps year-round.
The Alps are tall mountains that are covered with snow all year in Europe.
No, to have snow on top (permanently) the height of the mountain must exceed that of the snow line for the particular latitude at which the mountain is located (the snow line is higher at the equator than it is at the poles). Mountains that do not reach this height are not permanently snow capped (they may have snow on in winter months).
The Himalayan Mountains are the highest mountains in the world. They are covered in snow all year from the altitude. The higher the point, the colder it gets. So, the Himalayan Mountains are so tall that the caps are snow capped all year.
Asia has many mountains so it is a tourist site in the winter because of all that snow. The mountains cause problems because when the snow melts from on top of the mountains, the valley floods.
Some examples of European mountains that are covered in snow year-round are the Alps in Switzerland and the Pyrenees in Andorra. These mountains have high elevations and cold temperatures, which contribute to their perpetual snow cover.
Snow on the cooler, shadowed side of mountains, often remain when other snow has melted.
Snow is white, and snow is cold so it appears on the tops of mountains where it is the coldest.
Definitely not, although it's a strange thing to think of quantifying an entire state's snow. While the mountains of CO get a ton of snow, so do the mountains of all the other states out West.
yes it does have snow on it.
Ben Nevis