Yes. But no water is coming from the Rocky Mountains.
There are more mountains in the water (including volcanoes) than on land.
No. Mercury is a geologically dead planet. It has no volcanoes, not atmosphere, and no water.
Air
Different types of weathering changed the Rocky Mountains, including water, wind, and chemical. It has caused the mountains to change shape and erode in places.
Rocky mountains highlands and water
rivers streams filled from the rocky mountains.
Snow storms in the Appalachian Mountains and the Rocky Mountains form when moist air is forced to rise over the mountains, leading to cooling and condensation of water vapor into snow. The moisture for these storms can come from nearby bodies of water, such as the Atlantic Ocean for the Appalachian Mountains and the Pacific Ocean for the Rocky Mountains.
Coors Beer - Golden, Colorado Lumber - from the Rocky Mountains Coal - from the Rocky Mountains Spring Water - from Snow melt in the Rockys Paper - from trees in the Rocky Mountains Fat Tire brand beer - Steamboat Springs, CO
Chile has volcanoes, forests, mountains, canyons, as we as bodies of water.
The Continental Divide is found in the Rocky Mountains. It runs along the crest of the range, determining the direction of water flow on the continent.
The planet that fits this description is Mars. It has mountains, valleys, plains, and large landmasses known as continents, but no liquid water on its surface.