No, the Appalachian Mountain range, which contains the Blue Ridge Mountains, are all millions of years older than the Rocky Mountains.
The Blue Ridge Mountains are part of the larger Appalachian Mountains range.
Yes, the Blue Ridge Mountains formed by destructive force when the tectonic plates pulled apart during the break-up of the Super Continent. As well, geologists believe the Appalachian Mountains--which include the Blue Ridge Mountain Range--once included active volcanoes. The plate forces folded the land, making the mountains, while volcanic forces created igneous rocks etc. This was many millions of years ago. The Appalachian mountains, Allegheny Mountains, and Blue Ridge Mountains are much older than the Rocky Mountains.
physical weathering
no one formed it , it was only formed during the formation of the blue ridge mountains
no, there is no alligators in the Blue Ridge Mountains
The Appalachians and Rocky Mountains are huge. The Sierra Nevadas, Alleghenys, Blue Ridge, Presidential Range, White Mountains, Green Mountains...
The Blue Ridge Mountains are a physiographic province of the Appalachian Mountains in the northeastern continental US.
The Blue Ridge Mountains are part of the Appalachian Mountain range.
please say that blue ridge mountains is really cold it really is
Because its ridge and its blue, I think....
hot magma was forced out from the ground and cooled down.the same way stone mountain was formed.
The Blue Ridge Mountains are a physiographic province of the Appalachian Mountains in the northeastern continental US.