No, as Colorado is not 100% mountainous. There are flatlands, deserts, and hills located in Colorado in addition to mountains.
Well, first of all you can find them were I live Colorado and Oregan, lots of other places too :)
Depends on the reason for travel/movement. Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Vermont, California, New Mexico, Oregon, Washington and more all have mountains. However, the state most commonly associated with mountains is Colorado and the capitol of Colorado is Denver.
they live in huts in the mountains but not all the poeple just the people who live in vilages not in towns
Not all Peruvians live in the cities. Usually people with money live there. A majority of Peruvians live in the mountains y'know.
Yes, there are several locations that offer skiing in the Rockies, including Breckenridge, Colorado. There are also several venues in the Canadian Rockies. But not all areas of the Rocky Mountains are legally open to skiing.
Colorado has 4 seasons: Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter. But, in the mountains, it basicly stays cool, not cold, cool, all year.
Well, to answer this correctly, not all people of Asian descent live on mountains. However, the people who do, their bodies have adapted to the climate, air pressure, ect. To be able to live on a mountain your body would have to produce blood at a different rate, and your respiratory system would have to adapt as well.
Colorado has 4 seasons: Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter. But, in the mountains, it basicly stays cool, not cold, cool, all year.
It is estimated that around 6 million people live in the Rocky Mountains region, which spans multiple states including Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico. The population varies significantly depending on the specific area within the Rocky Mountains.
Yes it does have the rocky mountains look at the u.s fifty coin mint if you want to see the back of all the coins
chinchillas live in very cold places mountains is the main place they live Andes mountains is where you can find them that's why they are such little skitzers and like jumping around they have mountains to jump around on :)
According to the Williams Institute's analysis if the 2010 US Census, 12,424 same-sex couples live in Colorado, representing .63% of all Colorado households.