- Mar 23, 2009
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this seems silly, but i can't find the answer through wikipedia or google.
mountains are generally measured by their elevation above sea level, or alternately by their prominence...or both.
i had long thought that everest presented only a relatively minor amount of prominence, with base camp around 18000ft, iirc. that only leaves 11000ft or mountain to climb, far behind, say, denali. even accounting for everest being the 'major' peak in its range, why does the surrounding elevated plateau around everest count towards its prominence, while in other mountains it does not?
the linked wiki kind of explains it as 'everest is the highest mountain in asia, therefore its prominence goes all the way to sea level,' but that seems rather dumb. something i'm mising here, or is declaring everest to have the same elevation/prominence just one of those weird human conventions we've developed?
also i know this is a stupid question. sue me, i'm curious.
mountains are generally measured by their elevation above sea level, or alternately by their prominence...or both.
i had long thought that everest presented only a relatively minor amount of prominence, with base camp around 18000ft, iirc. that only leaves 11000ft or mountain to climb, far behind, say, denali. even accounting for everest being the 'major' peak in its range, why does the surrounding elevated plateau around everest count towards its prominence, while in other mountains it does not?
the linked wiki kind of explains it as 'everest is the highest mountain in asia, therefore its prominence goes all the way to sea level,' but that seems rather dumb. something i'm mising here, or is declaring everest to have the same elevation/prominence just one of those weird human conventions we've developed?
also i know this is a stupid question. sue me, i'm curious.
