Researchers say that two rivers merged some 89,000 years ago and gave the mightiest peak in the Himalayas a huge growth spurt ...
The persistent process of erosion is powerful enough to cause the world’s most intimidating mountain range to rise slowly up ...
The Sherpas’ resistance to altitude sickness is rooted in evolution, from a mutation in the EPAS1 gene to their body's ...
Earth's highest peak has gained as much as an extra 165 feet in elevation as the planet's crust adjusts due to erosion from a ...
“Mount Everest is a remarkable mountain of myth and legend and it’s still growing,” said study author Adam Smith in a ...
The Kosi River in the Himalayas once captured part of a tributary: the Arun River. It set off a chain of geological events ...
A river "capture" event in the Himalayas 89,000 years ago caused so much erosion it may have pushed the peak of Everest up by ...
The world’s tallest peak is still growing, scientists say, thanks in part to the merger of two nearby river systems tens of ...
Bhutan is hoarding bitcoins as abundant and cheap electricity turn this remote and peaceful Buddhist corner of South Asia ...
Mount Everest is Earth's tallest mountain - towering 5.5 miles (8.85 km) above sea level - and is actually still growing.
Mount Everest is having a growth spurt, but it’s not the only mountain getting taller. The Rocky Mountain ranges we call home ...
Mountains are in constant motion. That includes the world’s tallest peak, Mt. Everest, in the Himalayas. It’s added an extra 160 feet in the past 89,000 years, according to a new study. Adam Smith, a ...