Also known as alpine tundra, alpine meadow
biome that does not contain trees because it is at high elevation, with an associated harsh climate
~10 min read
Hikers traversing the Franconia Ridge in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, much of which is in the alpine zone. Alpine tundra in the Venezuelan Andes Alpine tundra is a type of natural region or biome that does not contain trees because it is at high elevation, with an associated harsh climate. As the latitude of a location approaches the poles, the threshold elevation for alpine tundra gets lower until it reaches sea level and merges with polar tundra.
The high elevation causes an adverse climate, which is too cold and windy to support tree growth. Alpine tundra transitions to sub-alpine forests below the tree line; stunted forests occurring at the forest-tundra ecotone are known as krummholz. With increasing elevation it ends at the snow line where snow and ice persist through summer.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).