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Where can you find a mountain that starts on sea level and has snow on the top?
Question
#65407. Asked by lastdodo.
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zbeckabee
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Alaska.
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robboy
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Probably the best example I can think of is Mauna Kea at almost 14,000 feet, and whose name means 'White Mountain' in Hawaiian. I've seen snow several feet in depth on its top in January, but here's a dandy pic of it.
http://hvo.wr.usgs.gov/volcanoes/maunakea/
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Arpeggionist
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The Hermon mountain range, split between Israel, Lebanon and Syria, has its base hundreds of feet below sea level, at the northern end of the Syro-African rift. The Israeli areas, the southernmost 7% of the range, is covered in snow for some of every winter. In Lebanon the mountains rise up higher than that, and many peaks of the Lebanese Hermon is covered in snow throughout the year.
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