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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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Flat Earthers - I don't get it, at all.
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<blockquote data-quote="KilledbyKenne" data-source="post: 16172390" data-attributes="member: 154527"><p>With my basic knowledge of curvature and going off your location, you have 3 mountain peaks that should be easily visable from 63-85 miles away.</p><p></p><p>Mt. Evans-14,260 ft elevation, W of Denver</p><p>Longs Peak-14255 ft elevation, NW of Denver</p><p>Pikes Peak-14,115 ft elevation, S-SW of Denver</p><p></p><p>According to Google, Denver ranges from 5,100 to 5,700 feet in elevation. @ 85 miles distance you will lose approximately 4,500 ft in visibility. So even in the most extreme circumstance (85 miles away with standing elevation of 5,700ft), you should still see about 4,000 ft of any of these peaks.</p><p></p><p>Someone smarter than I am, please feel free to correct anything I missed or got wrong.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="KilledbyKenne, post: 16172390, member: 154527"] With my basic knowledge of curvature and going off your location, you have 3 mountain peaks that should be easily visable from 63-85 miles away. Mt. Evans-14,260 ft elevation, W of Denver Longs Peak-14255 ft elevation, NW of Denver Pikes Peak-14,115 ft elevation, S-SW of Denver According to Google, Denver ranges from 5,100 to 5,700 feet in elevation. @ 85 miles distance you will lose approximately 4,500 ft in visibility. So even in the most extreme circumstance (85 miles away with standing elevation of 5,700ft), you should still see about 4,000 ft of any of these peaks. Someone smarter than I am, please feel free to correct anything I missed or got wrong. [/QUOTE]
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