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its 126723638791273632 feet long and this answer is wrong so lol and broke a leg but YOLO
No. The Appalachian mountains are not as tall or as long a mountain range as the rocky mountains.
The Appalachian Mountains are 1,500 miles long. They were discovered in June 1528 by Panfilo de Narvaez, when he led an expedition into Apalachee territory.
It is the Appalachian Mountains, at more than 1,500 miles long.
The Blue Ridge Mountains, which are the front range of the Appalachian mountains, run from Pennsylvania down into Georgia.
The Appalachian Mountain range was created during the middle Ordovician Period (about 496-440 million years ago).
they run along the Northeastern coast of the USA
The Appalachian Mountains are millions of years older than the Rocky Mountains. Geologists believe the Appalachian Mountains once had active volcanoes because of the types of rocks found but these went extinct long ago. Because of erosion, wind, and time, the Appalachian Mountains are now more rounded and less in height.
The Rocky Mountains. Some may say the Appalachian Mountains, but that's not true.
Geologically speaking the Appalachians are older. The Rockies are an example of geological upheaval, while the Appalachians used to be a solid plain millions of years ago and eroded to become the mountains we have today.
Okay~ Then///////// Similarity: They are located in the west. Differences: Rocky mountain is sharp, rocky peaks, but the Appalachian mountain is older, lower, then Rockies or Sierra Neveda. Also, Rocky mountain is higher then the Appalachian Mountain.
The Appalachian Mountains are an ancient mountain range formed long before volcanic activity in the region began. There are no active volcanoes in the Appalachians, as they are primarily composed of sedimentary rock that was created through tectonic and erosional processes.