India To Send Surveyors To Find Out If Everest Shrunk From Nepal Earthquake (phys.org)
OffTheLip writes: Recent scrutiny into the officially recorded height of the world's tallest mountain will lead to a re-measurement. A 7.8-magnitude earthquake in Nepal in 2015 is being eyed as the reason. India's surveyor general Swarna Subba Rao said, "We will remeasure it. Two years have passed since the major Nepal earthquake and there's doubt in the scientific community that it did in fact shrink." A team will depart once winter passes to take measurements to determine the current height of Everest. "The exercise will require a month of observation and roughly another fortnight for the data to be officially declared," reports Phys.Org. "The earthquake, Nepal's deadliest disaster in more than 80 years, is also believed to have shifted the earth beneath the capital Kathmandu several meters to the south."
It didn't shrink.... it's just cold up there.
It will take a month of observation then 2 weeks to process the data? I thought this sort of thing was done by satellites these days.
Or "has shrunk". Pick one. You're not rapping with Mary J Blige.
"Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
No, it'll be renamed Everer.
This article has three links. Two of them are to a Wikipedia page and one is to a BBC article from 2015.
How much has the height of Everest changed? Where is the link from 2017 mentioning this information?
Hello? Editors?
I think this is the missing phys.org link:
https://phys.org/news/2017-01-everest-true-height-spurs-fresh.html
I think the first link was suppose to point to something like this article.
As to how much the height of Everest has changed, that's what the entire point of the survey is to find out.