First of all, you need to make the mountain without the contour lines with the sandbox tools,
Then, move the whole mountain above the ground say, 6". Then, make a huge rectangle quite a bit bigger then your mountain, then make the rectangle a component, copy it up about 1-50' (Making an array) depending on the size of your mountain until you can't see the top of the highest peak, and select the mountain and all of the rect components, and run Intersect With Model. Then, delete the components, and move the mountain, and the newly created contour lines, back to their original spots. Done!
A map with contour lines would best show the locations of mountain ranges. Contour lines indicate elevation levels, allowing you to visualize the peaks and valleys of the mountain ranges. Additionally, shading or color-coding can help distinguish different mountain ranges on the map.
Contour lines show levels of elevation, where there are hills and valleys on a map
A topographical map will show contour lines and spot heights, with mountain tops marked with their height.
Maps can show elevation with contour lines
The darker contour lines on map are called index contour lines. Numbers that indicate elevations are often written on these lines.
Contour lines show elevation.
yes
Contour lines show elevation.
contour lines that are very close together
Contour lines that are close together indicate steep terrain, such as hills or mountains. When contour lines form closed loops with smaller lines inside, this indicates a depression or valley. The direction the contour lines bend can also show the shape of the land, with convex lines indicating hills and concave lines indicating valleys.
They show the relief of an area. They will have height values attached to them. The distance between contour lines gives an impression of gradient. The closer they are together, the steeper the slope.
Water flows downhill. Contour lines show the slope of the landscape, and the direction a stream must flow.