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Every spring,
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hundreds of adventure-seekers dream of climbing Qomolangma,
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also known as Mount Everest.
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At base camp, they hunker down for months
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waiting for the chance to scale the mountain's lofty, lethal peak.
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But why do people risk life and limb to climb Everest?
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Is it the challenge?
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The view?
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The chance to touch the sky?
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For many, the draw is Everest's status as the highest mountain on Earth.
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There's an important distinction to make here.
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Mauna Kea is actually the tallest from base to summit,
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but at 8850 meters above sea level,
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Everest has the highest altitude on the planet.
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To understand how this towering formation was born,
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we have to peer deep into our planet's crust,
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where continental plates collide.
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The Earth's surface is like an armadillo's armor.
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Pieces of crust constantly move over,
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under,
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and around each other.
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For such huge continental plates, the motion is relatively quick.
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They move two to four centimeters per year,
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about as fast as fingernails grow.
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When two plates collide,
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one pushes into or underneath the other, buckling at the margins,
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and causing what's known as uplift to accommodate the extra crust.
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That's how Everest came about.
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50 million years ago, the Earth's Indian Plate drifted north,
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bumped into the bigger Eurasian Plate,
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and the crust crumpled, creating huge uplift.
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Mountain Everest lies at the heart of this action,
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on the edge of the Indian-Eurasian collision zone.
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But mountains are shaped by forces other than uplift.
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As the land is pushed up, air masses are forced to rise as well.
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Rising air cools, causing any water vapor within it to condense
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and form rain or snow.
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As that falls, it wears down the landscape,
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dissolving rocks or breaking them down in a process known as weathering.
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Water moving downhill carries the weathered material
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and erodes the landscape,
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carving out deep valleys and jagged peaks.
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This balance between uplift and erosion gives a mountain its shape.
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But compare the celestial peaks of the Himalayas
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to the comforting hills of Appalachia.
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Clearly, all mountains are not alike.
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That's because time comes into the equation, too.
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When continental plates first collide, uplift happens fast.
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The peaks grow tall with steep slopes.
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Over time, however, gravity and water wear them down.
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Eventually, erosion overtakes uplift,
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wearing down peaks faster than they're pushed up.
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A third factor shapes mountains: climate.
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In subzero temperatures, some snowfall doesn't completely melt away,
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instead slowly compacting until it becomes ice.
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That forms the snowline, which occurs at different heights around the planet
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depending on climate.
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At the freezing poles, the snowline is at sea level.
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Near the equator, you have to climb five kilometers before it gets cold enough
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for ice to form.
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Gathered ice starts flowing under its own immense weight
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forming a slow-moving frozen river known as a glacier,
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which grinds the rocks below.
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The steeper the mountains, the faster ice flows,
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and the quicker it carves the underlying rock.
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Glaciers can erode landscapes swifter than rain and rivers.
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Where glaciers cling to mountain peaks, they sand them down so fast,
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they lop the tops off like giant snowy buzz saws.
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So then, how did the icy Mount Everest come to be so tall?
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The cataclysmic continental clash from which it arose
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made it huge to begin with.
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Secondly, the mountain lies near the tropics,
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so the snowline is high, and the glaciers relatively small,
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barely big enough to whittle it down.
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The mountain exists in a perfect storm of conditions
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that maintain its impressive stature.
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But that won't always be the case.
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We live in a changing world where the continental plates,
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Earth's climate,
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and the planet's erosive power
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might one day conspire to cut Mount Everest down to size.
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For now, at least, it remains legendary in the minds of hikers,
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adventurers,
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and dreamers alike.