Travis
Misanthrope of the Mountains
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,133
Way back in college I took a class on physical geography. At one point we were talking about the geo-physical history or North America. I remember one of the things that captured my imagination was the idea that some think at one time North America had an enormous mountain range that ranged from 12,000 to 14,000 meters high (39,000-45,000 feet). At the time I was astounded at the mere thought of mountains on Earth with peaks higher than most commercial airliners will fly.
In fact it brings up all sorts of questions: would mountains that high even be climbable by humans? What kind of impact might such a range have on weather? I'm thinking that it would produce the most absolute rain shadow imaginable.
Now back when those ancient mountains were around there really wasn't much life on land yet. But try to picture this mountain range on Earth today. If it was near the equator would one side have an incredible rain forest while the opposite side dried up as a desert with even less precipitation than the Atacama?
And what about airliners? Would this mountain range pose a huge obstacle to air travel? Would it potentially produce air compression waves high in the atmosphere huge distances downwind of it?
In fact it brings up all sorts of questions: would mountains that high even be climbable by humans? What kind of impact might such a range have on weather? I'm thinking that it would produce the most absolute rain shadow imaginable.
Now back when those ancient mountains were around there really wasn't much life on land yet. But try to picture this mountain range on Earth today. If it was near the equator would one side have an incredible rain forest while the opposite side dried up as a desert with even less precipitation than the Atacama?
And what about airliners? Would this mountain range pose a huge obstacle to air travel? Would it potentially produce air compression waves high in the atmosphere huge distances downwind of it?