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brucehoult | 20 days ago
One advantage in NZ is that on a nice day you actually have a good chance of seeing it.
Oh ... clicking on Mt Owen doesn't return the favour ... or the other nearest peaks. But Culliford Hill does show a return back to Ruapehu, 355.4 km. Clicking on Tapuae-o-Uenuku also, as expected, gives a line to Ruapehu: 342.3km.
Mt Cook is high, but has too many other high peaks near it.
Mt Taranaki is isolated, but doesn't turn up any very long distances.
I don't expect any other candidates in NZ.
Update: actual and accidental photo of Tapuae-o-Uenuku from Ruapehu (342 km), seven months ago.
https://www.reddit.com/r/newzealand/comments/1m9p0bh/tapuaeo...
And, as pointed out in a comment, also Mount Alarm 2.5 km further.
What is the longest in North America? Or Europe proper -- not Elbrus (which I've not been to but have been close enough to see, from several places e.g. from a house in Lermontov (~94 km only), summit of Beshtau (93 km), Dombai ski field (~63 km), somewhere on A157 (~50km).
tombh|20 days ago
So using that, I would say that the longest line of sight in North America is from Mount Rainier, at 390km, looking North West into Canada: https://map.alltheviews.world/longest/-121.76853942871094_46...
brucehoult|20 days ago
That gives a longest in NZ of 365.3 km from Ruapehu, skirting past close by Tapuae-o-Uenuku (in the Inland Kaikoura Range) to a point on the Seaward Kaikoura Range near the peak of Manakau. Clicking on the actual Manakau peak also gives 365.3 km back to Ruapehu.
I can't seem to find a peak to get a reverse path back to Mt Ranier. Everything I try gets stuck in the Olympic Peninsular. (I was there once ... 1998 or so ... a place called Hurricane Ridge IIRC)
repelsteeltje|20 days ago
Anyone with expertise want to comment?
kmaitreys|20 days ago
Mountains can rise higher near equator because you have the least gravity there. The whole Earth bulges along the equator. But I don't think it's measurable.