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Spotlight on Interesting Factoids: A Tale of Two Mountains

1/19/2013

2 Comments

 
I just learned an interesting factoid that I want to share with you. The image below is a picture of the tallest mountain in the world. Do you know which is it?

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If you answered Mount Everest you are correct. This mountain is over 29,000 feet high and has a lot of name recognition in the world. But let me ask the above question in a different way. When measured from the center of the Earth, which is the tallest mountain in the world? Or alternatively, the summit of which mountain is closer to outer space? Surprisingly the answer is not “Everest” but rather the mountain in the picture below. Do you know its name?

Picture
This is a volcano in Ecuador called Chimborazo and it is 20,564 feet tall when measured from sea level. However, when measured from the center of the Earth, Chimborazo is 1.35 miles taller than Everest and therefore also closer to outer space! In fact, when measured in this manner, Everest is the fifth highest mountain in the world with the second, third, and fourth positions occupied by the mountains Huascaran in Peru, Cotopaxi also in Ecuador, and Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, respectively.

The reason for this surprising fact is that the Earth is not a perfect sphere. Due to the Earth’s rotation, the land and the sea around the equator bulge outward. Someone standing at sea level on the Earth’s poles is about 13 miles closer to the center of the Earth than someone standing at sea level on the equator. Because Chimborazo is located 1 degree south of the equator it sits on top of this bulge, whereas Everest which is 28 degrees north of the equator is not “pushed up” as much.

When I learned about this my first thought was: what about the Death Zone?

The Death Zone is found in high mountains above an elevation of 26,000 feet. At this altitude the abundance of oxygen is only 1/3 of that found at sea level and the human body is incapable of adapting effectively. The death zone is one of the reasons Everest is so hard to climb and also why the route to the top in this area of the mountain is littered with the bodies of dead climbers. I reasoned that if Chimborazo is closer to outer space than Everest, then it should also have a death zone. As it turns out this is not the case because the Earth’s atmosphere also bulges out around the equator. As a result of this, the summit of Chimborazo is safely below the death zone and the human body can function in the thin atmosphere of the summit if allowed the time for adaptation to high altitudes.

So there you have it. Now next time someone says that Everest is the tallest mountain, you can impress everyone by saying, “Wait a minute…” and proceed to set the record straight. Remember to reference this blog as your source. Thanks!

Everest photo credit: Rupert Taylor-Price / Foter.com / CC BY
Chimborazo photo credit: apgwhite / Foter.com / CC BY-NC-ND

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Spotlight on Cool Places: The Sedlec Ossuary

11/10/2012

2 Comments

 
In the suburbs of the town of Kutna Hora, which located about 43 miles away from Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic, you will find a church called the Church of All Saints that looks perfectly normal…from the outside. Once you go inside you discover why the church is called the Sedlec Ossuary or Church of Bones. In a chapel inside the church the bones of more than 40,000 people have been used as decorations for the walls forming things such a coat of arms or a magnificent chandelier. These bones are no imitations. Each of those craniums you see in the picture or the video below was a living human being a few hundred years ago. Some people find this objectionable, but where would you like your mortal remains to rest: inside some dark cold hole in the ground or as art on the walls of a church?

What do you think?
Picture
                                  ***
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2 Comments
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    I am a tinker, tailor,
    soldier, sailor,
    rich man, poor man,
    beggar-man, thief!

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