Tom is exactly correct that you are misinterpreting perspective. The experiment would prove nothing to me. I have no doubt that the mountains' height as calculated by simple art-school perspective will differ.
If I can climb a significant mountain, and measure 3D and 2D distance on the way,
and receive elevation with GPS, and also read elevation from topographic map data
given the 2D coordinates from GPS (independently determining altitude).
3D distance using Pythagoras' Theorem to apply the vertical difference to a 2D distance measurement.
What COULD be done to prove something to you with those tools?
#" class="bbc_link" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">AVEC GPS - Logan's Ridge, Sth Ridge.I am doing another climb soon, and can measure anything that I find a reason to measure.
I have heard people on this forum claiming to be pilots.
It happens I can also fly a single engine light aircraft (Piper Tomahawk) over the same area.
It wouldn't be unreasonable to fly 100km from a given point that I don't choose,
to any point that I do choose, and one further extend of that ends up here.
The air base is about 70km away from this area.
Obviously I cannot fly across continents, or from one to another.