Geography, asked by Vivswan, 11 months ago

snow melts slowly on mountain slopes in summer give reason​

Answers

Answered by rishabhs9211
19

Answer:

Explanation:

There are two reasons for this. The air at high altitudes is thinner, and much colder than lower down. So snow both forms on them more readily and stays longer, as the climate is much colder higher up. The other reason is that because they are mountains, the sun does not fall on them all the day. Often the sun sets early behind them, or behind nearby mountains that shades them. So although there is some melting, after all, that’s where many rivers originate, much snow and ice remains all year round.

Answered by rulasa2801
0

Explanation:

There are two reasons for this. The air at high altitudes is thinner, and much colder than lower down. So snow both forms on them more readily and stays longer, as the climate is much colder higher up. The other reason is that because they are mountains, the sun does not fall on them all the day. Often the sun sets early behind them, or behind nearby mountains that shades them. So although there is some melting, after all, that's where many rivers originate, much snow and ice remains all year round.

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