Of course airplane heights are safer than mountain heights. Mountain heights are extremely dangerous and really scary but airplane heights are more higher altitudes. Airplane heights are not that scary also it is much safer than mountain heights.
If one side of the mountain has a lot of water, and there is a really high mountain range, then the water can't get over top, then the rain stays on the one side. Hope this helps :) Please recommend me :)
Angular mountain peak with three or more arêtes found in glaciated areas; for example, the Matterhorn in Switzerland. It is formed when three or four corries (steep-sided hollows) are eroded, back-to-back, around the sides of a mountain, leaving an isolated peak in the middle. and yor mum
"Brian" is an Irish name that is related to the word for "high". So a literal translation is something like a "hill" or "mountain". A more metaphorical meaning would be more like "nobleman".
The answer depends on the basis for the ranking that you wish to use. Is it the order in which it joined the US, its area, its population, its output per head, its mortality rate, rainfall, average altitude? The list is endless. And since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
The windward side of a mountain is typically wetter and receives more rainfall due to the moist air being forced to rise and cool, causing precipitation. In contrast, the leeward side experiences a rain shadow effect, receiving much less rainfall as the air descends and warms, leading to drier conditions.
The windward side of a mountain typically receives more rainfall because as moist air rises up the mountain, it cools and condenses, leading to precipitation. On the leeward side, the air is drier and descends, which causes it to warm and retain less moisture, resulting in a rain shadow effect and less rainfall.
The windward side of a mountain receives more rainfall due to moist air being forced to rise and cool, leading to precipitation. In contrast, the leeward side, also known as the rain shadow side, receives less rainfall because the descending air is warmed and unable to hold as much moisture, resulting in drier conditions.
The windward side of a mountain receives more rainfall because as the moist air rises over the mountain, it cools and condensed, leading to precipitation. On the other hand, the leeward side, or the rain shadow side, receives less rainfall because the air that descends on that side is dry and has already released much of its moisture on the windward side.
The leeward side of a mountain is typically drier and experiences a rain shadow effect, where the air loses moisture as it rises and cools over the mountain, leading to less precipitation. In contrast, the windward side of a mountain is usually wetter due to orographic lifting, where air is forced to rise, cool, and condense, resulting in more rainfall or snowfall.
It is the sloped side of a mountain that is colder and gets more rain. Why? Because the leeward side is the opposite of the windward side and is also dryer because when the clouds climb the mountain range (windward side) they loses all their water so there is none left for the leeward side.
The two sides of a mountain range are typically referred to as the windward side and the leeward side. The windward side faces the prevailing winds and receives more precipitation, while the leeward side is sheltered from the wind and tends to be drier.
The windward side of a mountain receives more rainfall because as moist air rises up the mountain slope, it cools and condenses, leading to precipitation. In contrast, the leeward side, also known as the rain shadow side, receives significantly less rainfall as the air has already released much of its moisture on the windward side and descends, causing warming and drying.
because one side is cooler than the other
on the leeward side
I do not know what you are talking about but here is some basic information about Leeward and Windward. Windward and leeward are two opposite words used on boats. Windward is the direction from which the wind is blowing at the time in question. Leeward is the direction downwind from the point of reference. Windward = the direction that the wind is coming from Leeward = the direction that the wind is going I hope you can figure out the answer from there I am sorry I don't know what you are talking about.
You may refer to the following link, which is self explanatory: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rain_shadow Answered on 26/06/2009 by: Jeril