Mountains of the World - 2000

To produce this map, topographical data from the GTOPO30 global digital elevation model (USGS EROS Data Center 1996) were used to generate slope and local (5km radius) elevation range on a 30 arc-second grid of the world. These parameters were combined with elevation to arrive at the empirically...

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://resources.unep-wcmc.org/products/e6862c0331d04362ab7dc5bae983c5f6
Author UNEP-WCMC
Maintainer UNEP-WCMC
Last Updated March 9, 2023, 14:17 (UTC)
Created March 9, 2023, 12:16 (UTC)
GUID unep-wcmc-rsrc-geospatial-dataset-e6862c0331d04362ab7dc5bae983c5f6
Issued 2022-06-08T14:03:14.543+00:00
Language en
Modified 2022-06-23T14:53:48.957+00:00
Publisher email info@unep-wcmc.org
Publisher name UNEP-WCMC
Theme Geospatial Dataset
avg_rating 0
citation UNEP-WCMC. (2000). Mountains of the World. Cambridge (UK): UNEP-WCMC. https://doi.org/10.34892/jh4m-0h26
data_type webpage
date_published 2000-01-01
icon_url https://resources.unep-wcmc.orghttps://data-gis.unep-wcmc.org/portal/sharing/rest/content/items/e6862c0331d04362ab7dc5bae983c5f6/info/thumbnail/ago_downloaded.png
license unep-wcmc-general
num_views 95
short_description To provide a global context for a discussion of mountain forests, it is first necessary to define the locations and types of mountain forests, and this in turn requires a definition of mountains or mountain areas. Altitude and slope and the environmental gradients they generate are key components of such a definition, but their combination is problematic. Simple altitude thresholds both exclude older and lower mountain systems and include areas of relatively high elevation that have little topographic relief and few environmental gradients. Using slope as a criterion on its own or in combination with altitude can resolve the latter problem, but not the former.