It is thought that the summit of Mount Everest started at the bottom of the ancient Tethys Sea, the motion of the Indian sub continental plate and the urasian continental plate colliding, about 30 - 50 million years ago, caused the mountain to rise up and become the highest mountain on the Earth.
Mount Everest was formed millions of years ago through the collision of tectonic plates, specifically the Indian plate pushing northward into the Eurasian plate. This collision caused intense folding, faulting, and uplifting of the Earth's crust, eventually leading to the formation of the highest peak on Earth, Mount Everest.
The wind on Mount Everest is called the summit wind. This wind comes from the jet stream and can reach speed of up to 70 miles per hour.
It is thought that the summit of Mount Everest started at the bottom of the ancient Tethys Sea, the motion of the Indian sub continental plate and the urasian continental plate colliding, about 30 - 50 million years ago, caused the mountain to rise up and become the highest mountain on the Earth.
Mount Everest can be very scary to some climbers. There are sheer drops of thousands of feet, the icefall has blocks of ice the size of a car or house that could collaspe at anytime, the wind can be that strong it could blow you off the mountan.
No, they are formed by wind
because the wind push lose snow at the peak of the mountain
Erosional caves are formed by the action of water or wind.
they are both formed when wind or water picks up sediment
The temperature at the summit of Mount Everest never rises above freezing, averaging -32F (-36C) in winter and -2F (-19C) in summer. The wind chill, sometimes blowing a gale at an hundred miles per hour will make it feel very much colder too.
The temperature at the summit of Mount Everest never rises above freezing, averaging -32F (-36C) in winter and -2F (-19C) in summer. The wind chill, sometimes blowing a gale at an hundred miles per hour will make it feel very much colder too.
The temperature at the summit of Mount Everest never rises above freezing, averaging -32F (-36C) in winter and -2F (-19C) in summer. The wind chill, sometimes blowing a gale at an hundred miles per hour will make it feel very much colder too.
The temperature at the summit of Mount Everest never rises above freezing, averaging -32F (-36C) in winter and -2F (-19C) in summer. The wind chill, sometimes blowing a gale at an hundred miles per hour will make it feel very much colder too.