weathering rounded the mountai s by breaking down jagged peaks.
because they they shaped history
weather
Weathering rounded the mountains by breaking down jagged peaks.
Weathering helped shape the Appalachian Mountains by breaking down rock and soil over time through processes like mechanical and chemical weathering. This allowed for erosion and the gradual uplift of the mountains through tectonic activity, resulting in the distinctive shape and formation of the Appalachian range we see today.
by walking on them they change shape. :)
it can change the mountains size and or shape. for example, erosion could change a mountain to a hill
Shape. Erosion would change the shape of the tops of the mountains. It may also change in height a little, too.
Different types of weathering changed the Rocky Mountains, including water, wind, and chemical. It has caused the mountains to change shape and erode in places.
The Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York are considered to be some of the oldest mountains in North America. They are heavily eroded and characterized by their dome-like shape, which contrasts with the more rugged peaks of younger mountain ranges.
Erosion by wind and water.
The Appalachian Mountains can be separated into 3 parts: the Northern (which starts at Newfoundland and Labrador to the Hudson River), the Central (which starts at the Hudson Valley to the New River) and the Southern (which is everything at the New River and beyond). The characteristics of the northern section are the Long Range Mountains, the Annieopsquotch Mountains, the Chic-Choc Mountains, the Notre Dame Range, Longfellow Mountains, the White Mountains, the Green Mountains, The Berkshires and the Metacomet Ridge Mountains. The central part contains the Valley Ridges (among the Allegheny Front in the Allegheny Plateau and the Great Appalachian Valley), the New York and New Jersey Highlands, the Taconic Mountains and the Blue Ridge. The Southern part is made up of the Western Blue Ridge, the Ridge and Valley Appalachians, the Blue Ridge and the Cumberland Plateau. Some might also say that the plateau formed to make hills and valleys, the true folded mountains and other mountains and plateaus such as the Catskill Mountains are also part of the Appalachian Mountains. classified by vaness@
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