Yes its height is the same as its radius
two right triangles = full rectangle That is - if you multiply height times base of a triangle, the area will be 1/2 of a rectangle having the same height, and a width the same as the triangle base.
It is the same as the outside height.
According to the US Geological Survey, there is no strict height requirement for mountains vs hills. There used to be one at 1,000 feet, but the rule was abandoned in the middle of the twentieth century.
For a parallelogram that is NOT a rectangle or square (i.e. a rhombus or rhomboid), multiply the base times the height. Draw a line through the parallelogram so that it is a large rectangle in the middle, and two small triangles to each side.Now you can see that the area of the parallelogram is the same as a rectangle of the same height and width. You must use the "height" (distance between top and bottom), not the length of the slanted sides.Area = base times height. (A=bh)Area = base*heightBase x height
According to me the same phenomenon that have lead to the current height of the Himalayas. The crusts are continuously pushing each other leading to the increase in height of the mountains.
himalaya & dromali thet i know
53''
two of the same plates colide
Height from sea level.
Only if the two triangles have the same base and height then they have the same area, because an area of a triangle OS the base times the height divided by two.
the is k9 in Asia an mt.everest on Nepal
False. The equation for area of a triangle is 1/2 base x height. The height and the base would have to be the same for two triangles to have the same area.
Sierra Madre
No
No. You need to have the same vertex angle, or have the same ratio between the height and radius of the cones in order to have similar cones.
The Appalachian Mountains are belived to have been the highest mountains on earth roughfly 466 million years ago. The mountains are divided onto a series of ranges, with the individual mountains averaginf from a height of 3,000 feet (900 m). The highest of the group is Mount Mitchell at a height of 6,684 feet, (2,037 m)