Today I’ve read online on the BBC World Service, this article about how high a mountain such as the Everest, can get.
In other planets, Mars in particular, there are mountains that are much higher than any on Earth, mostly extinct volcanoes.
A height measurement made in the 18th Century as part of the Great Trigonometrical Survey of India (*), arranged by the then British colonial government, determined the height of the Everest with the, for the time, outstanding precision: with only a nine-meters (some 27 feet) difference from very precise measurements, made to better than a quarter of an inch, using GPS in modern times.
I have been always quite keen on the use of GPS, for my own professional reasons, and I knew personally the scientific leader of the first expedition to Mount Everest to install a GPS receiver at the top and get a precise measurement, who told me that it was certainly a hard thing to do.
Several other similar expeditions have followed since then.
But, as explained in the article, mountain heights change due to the whole area where they stand rising up as a result of plate tectonic movements underneath, such as those resulting from the collision between India and Eurasia that first created and, still going on, continues to raise the Himalayas as big “carpet wrinkles” on the Earth’s surface; and the opposite effect of erosion that tends to lower mountains in the long run. Understanding the latter effect is not a simple matter, as explained in the article.
There is also the fact that heights are measured relative to sea level; this is hard to do in mountainous areas, because it is difficult there to make the necessary measurements to find the sea level. The best results are based on the mapping of the bumps in the gravity field of the Earth using satellites, something I have worked on for many years. At present, sea-level height determined in this way, in most parts of the world, is known to better than four inches.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20220407-how-tall-will-mount-everest-get-before-it-stops-growing
(*) Considered these days as the equivalent of a land surveyor’s “Moonshot.”, it has a truly fascinating history.
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