Rising  sharply from a narrow summit area, these majestic mountains stand  prominently above their surroundings. However, many amongst us have yet  to learn the difference between the tallest and the highest mountains.  Although, it sounds the same and we often confuse the two but there is a  difference. The tallest mountains have the measures from the base of  the mountain to its peak, whereas the highest mountains have the  measures from the sea level to the peak. See the difference?
Looking our planet, into the solar  system there are many mountains, peaks and ridges way taller than the  mountains on the planet Earth. These extraterrestrial mountains may be a  result of crater impact, high volcanic activity etc., none of which we  would want happening in our home planet.
10. Makalu
The fifth highest mountain in the world  above sea level at an altitude of 8,481 m above sea level and located at  the Nepal-China border. The Makalu has a unique shape of a four sided  pyramid and lies only 19 km southeast of Mount Everest. The first  attempts to climb the mountain began in 1954. However, the first  successful ascent of the summit was made in 1955 during a French  expedition by Lionel Terray and Jean Couzy.
9. Lhotse
At 8,516 m above sea level, Lhotse is  situated at the borders of China and Nepal and is connected to the  Everest through the southern mountain pass. The south face of Lhotse has  seen many failed attempts, fatalities with a very few successful  ascents. The main summit of Lhotse was first climbed in 1956 by a Swiss  team of Ernst Reiss and Fritz Luchsinger. However, the summit of Lhotse  Middle remained the highest unclimbed point on Earth, until 2001 when a  Russian Expedition finally made a first ascent.
8. Kangchenjunga
The third highest mountain of the world  at 8,586 m above sea level, Kangchenjunga is located at the India-Nepal  border in the Himalayan Range. The five peaks are collectively called  the Kangchenjunga meaning “The Five Treasures of Snows”. The earliest  attempts of reaching the summit started in 1848 and it was not until  1955 that Joe Brown and George Band made the first ascent. The landscape  of Kangchenjunga is shared by four countries namely China, India, Nepal  and Bhutan.
7. K-2
The second highest mountain in the  world, K-2 or Godwin Austin has a peak elevation of 8,611 m above sea  level and lies at the northwest of the Karakoram Range. Known as the  savage mountain due its high fatality rate; K-2 is situated at the  border of China and Pakistan. Since it is almost impossible to climb the  K-2 from China, it is majorly climbed from Pakistan. K-2 was named by  Thomas Montgomerie, while he surveyed the Karakoram and labeled its  prominent peaks as K-1, K-2, K-3, K-4 and K-5. The earliest attempts to  climb the savage mountain began in 1902 and the first successful ascent  was finally made in 1954 by Lino Lacedelli and Achille Compagnoni in an  Italian Expedition. One interesting fact about K-2 is that no one has  ever attempted to climb the summit during the winter season.
6. Mount Everest
 The world’s highest mountain rises in  the eastern Himalayas between Nepal and Tibet. A young limestone  mountain not yet worn by erosion, it has two peaks, one of which reaches  a height of 8,848 m. Everest is covered in snow except for its bare,  gale-swept summits. Many glaciers feed rivers that rise near the Everest  base. The mountain got its name in 1865, in the honor of Sir George  Everest, the British surveyor general of India who established the  location and the approximate altitude of the mountain. Its Tibetan name  Chomolungma means “goddess mother of the world”.
Climbing attempts began in the early  1920s, and several expeditions came within 300 m of the top. Success  came with the development of special equipment to cope with the low  oxygen supply, high winds and extreme cold. On May 29, 1953, Edmund  Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay, a Nepalese Sherpa tribseman  became the first successful climbers of the Everest.
5. Mauna Kea
The tallest mountain in the world, Mauna  Kea is a large dormant volcano located on the north central Hawaii  Island, about 43 km northwest of Hilo. Measuring 4,205 m high above sea  level, Mauna Kea extends an additional 5,547 km to the ocean floor.  Thus, from base to peak it is the tallest individual mountain in the  world. The Mauna Kea was last active more than 4,000 years ago; its snow  covered cone is used for skiing and is also the site of the Mauna Kea  Observatory, the highest astronomical observatory in the world. The  mountain’s upper slopes have caves where ancient Hawaiians dug basalt  for tools. The lower slopes support large cattle ranches and coffee  plantations. The mountain is regarded in the Hawaiian legend as the home  of the goddess Poliahu, the fire goddess of Mauna Kea.
4. Maxwell Montes
Rising to a height of 11,000 m, Maxwell  Montes is the highest point on the surface of planet Venus. Located on  the northern highlands of Ishtar Terra, the origin of the mountain belt  is controversial with several suggesting its formation. The Maxwell  Montes was discovered in 1967 by scientists at the American Arecibo  Radio Telescope in Puerto Rico. The mountain is named after the  mathematician and physician James Clerk Maxwell, whose works in radio  waves made the radar and ultimately resulted in the exploration of the  surface of planet Venus.
3. Boösaule Montes
Boösaule Montes is known to be the  tallest non-volcanic mountain of the Solar System. It is located at Io,  the fourth largest satellite of the Solar System and innermost satellite  of the planet Jupiter. The geology of Io is quite interesting as it  contains about 400 active volcanoes and contains over 150 mountains on  its surface. The Boösaule Montes is one such mountain that lies on the  northwest of the large Pele plume deposit and reaches an elevation of  17,500 m. The mountain got its name from a cave in the Greek Mythology  where Epaphus, son of Zeus, was born.
2. Equatorial Ridge
Located on the dark hemisphere of the  third largest satellite, Iapetus, of the planet Saturn, the Equatorial  Ridge runs along the center of the hemisphere with some isolated peaks  as high as 20 km. The Equatorial Ridge was discovered by Cassini  spacecraft on December 31, 2004. The formation of the ridge is still  debated upon; however, it is agreed that the ridge is ancient as it is  heavily cratered. The prominent bulge of the ridge gives Iapetus a  walnut like shape.
1. Olympus Mons
So far the tallest mountain discovered in our Solar System, Olympus Mons stands 24 km above a smooth plain on the planet Mars. Approximately three times taller than the Mount Everest, Olympus Mons was discovered by the US space probe, Mariner 9, in 1971 when it sent pictures of four immense volcanic mountains. The tallest of these shield volcanoes, Mons Olympus, dwarfs the largest such feature on the Earth, The Mauna Kea. The extraordinary height of the Olympus Mons owes to the absence of mobile tectonic plates, allowing the mountain to remain fixed on a stationary hotspot and continues discharging lava till the mountain reaches a considerable height. The base of the mountain pushes down 2km deep into the crust each year, owing to the enormous weight pressing down the Martian crust.
 
 
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