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See Mount Everest in your Coleman 8135 eyeglasses

This is a discussion on See Mount Everest in your Coleman 8135 eyeglasses within the Coleman Eyeglasses forums; Mount Everest is one of the tallest mountains in the world. Even something that tall ...


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Old 02-09-2009, 10:23 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2007
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Default See Mount Everest in your Coleman 8135 eyeglasses

Mount Everest is one of the tallest mountains in the world. Even something that tall can't be seen clearly with poor eyesight. Wearing Coleman's will certainly help you see this more clearly.

It is part of the Himalayan Mountains. They were formed in the last few million years. After the supercontinent of Laurasia broke up millions of years ago, India moved slowly north towards Asia and then crashed into it. The seabed between the two plates (the earth's crust is divided into large areas of land called plates) was crumbled and pushed up on the northern rim of India to form mountains. These two plates of the earth's crust are still moving, so the Himalayas are being pushed up higher.

The highest mountain on the planet, Mount Everest is growing two inches taller each year. Satellite technology says the mountain is currently 29,107 feet tall. First recognized as the highest peek in 1852, it got its western name ten years later in 1862. Mount Everest was named for Sir George Everest (1790-1866), a British surveyor. Surveyors don't agree on the height of Mount Everest. The British government in the 1800's thought the height was 29,002 feet. In 1954 the Indian government said it's 29,028 feet, but a widely used unofficial figure says it is 29,141 feet!

Mount Everest sits on the border between Nepal and Tibet.
People from the western hemisphere weren't allowed to climb Mount Everest until the early 1920's. The first known climb that made it to the top was made by a New Zealander named Edmund Hillary and a Napalese named Tenzing Norgay. They climbed the mountain in 1953. Since then Everest has been climbed by 400 people. Access is restricted by the Nepalese to prevent too much damage to the environment.

Mount Everest is 97 degrees below freezing, talk about cold! The nice thing about Coleman 8135's is that your goggles will fit right over them.
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Old 10-14-2011, 12:14 PM
Contact Lenses Forum - Bachelors Degree
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 462
Default Interesting

Quote:
Originally Posted by mamabear1 View Post
Mount Everest is one of the tallest mountains in the world. Even something that tall can't be seen clearly with poor eyesight. Wearing Coleman's will certainly help you see this more clearly.

It is part of the Himalayan Mountains. They were formed in the last few million years. After the supercontinent of Laurasia broke up millions of years ago, India moved slowly north towards Asia and then crashed into it. The seabed between the two plates (the earth's crust is divided into large areas of land called plates) was crumbled and pushed up on the northern rim of India to form mountains. These two plates of the earth's crust are still moving, so the Himalayas are being pushed up higher.

The highest mountain on the planet, Mount Everest is growing two inches taller each year. Satellite technology says the mountain is currently 29,107 feet tall. First recognized as the highest peek in 1852, it got its western name ten years later in 1862. Mount Everest was named for Sir George Everest (1790-1866), a British surveyor. Surveyors don't agree on the height of Mount Everest. The British government in the 1800's thought the height was 29,002 feet. In 1954 the Indian government said it's 29,028 feet, but a widely used unofficial figure says it is 29,141 feet!

Mount Everest sits on the border between Nepal and Tibet.
People from the western hemisphere weren't allowed to climb Mount Everest until the early 1920's. The first known climb that made it to the top was made by a New Zealander named Edmund Hillary and a Napalese named Tenzing Norgay. They climbed the mountain in 1953. Since then Everest has been climbed by 400 people. Access is restricted by the Nepalese to prevent too much damage to the environment.

Mount Everest is 97 degrees below freezing, talk about cold! The nice thing about Coleman 8135's is that your goggles will fit right over them.
Not very closely related to glasses, but interesting nonetheless.
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