At high altitudes, such as at the top of a mountain, the air temperature is colder, and as a result, snow is able to stay there without melting. But as you go farther down the mountain, the air temperature gets warmer, and any snow that has fallen will melt.
No, to have snow on top (permanently) the height of the mountain must exceed that of the snow line for the particular latitude at which the mountain is located (the snow line is higher at the equator than it is at the poles). Mountains that do not reach this height are not permanently snow capped (they may have snow on in winter months).
a snowline is where you put cocaine on your girls booty and snort it.
The sudden sliding of snow is called an avalanche. Usually when there is an avalanche there is a lot of snow that slides from on top of a mountain.
Because it is by the equator which makes the reigion of Kenya too hot for it to snow. Actually it CAN snow in Kenya and does around Mount Kenya, an extinct volcano 5,199 metres (17,057 ft) tall. The mountain has snow on its summit and seven glaciers
An avalanche is like a rockslide, but on a snow-covered mountain.
A snow capped mountain is a mountain with snow on the top if it.
a snow mountain top
rock and or snow
it is usually colder the higher up you go so the top would be covered in snow while the base wouldn't be
The summit of the mountain is at the top.
No, to have snow on top (permanently) the height of the mountain must exceed that of the snow line for the particular latitude at which the mountain is located (the snow line is higher at the equator than it is at the poles). Mountains that do not reach this height are not permanently snow capped (they may have snow on in winter months).
The change in elevation from the base of the mountain to the top is known as the mountain's elevation gain. It is calculated by subtracting the base elevation from the summit elevation.
Alpine at the top of the snow line
There are various names, but possibly most common is the 'peak'
If it were to go beyond the atmosphere there would be no snow, but no mountain on Earth will ever get close to that tall.
The opposite of the base of a moutain would be it's peak. The very tip of the mountain where all the snow rests and where it's coldest.
At the summit of a mountain, you might find rocks, snow, glaciers, vegetation, and possibly a marker denoting the peak. Wildlife like mountain goats or birds may also be spotted at the mountain's peak.