Slow down, Barbarian. You do not even understand what you're trying to discuss. What you do sound like is you wish you had a class full of first year students and you are teaching them something new.
Judging by your befuddled responses and your failure to answer my questions, all this blindsided you once again.
Barbarian observes:
As you see, any mountain range that is getting higher, is sinking deeper into the mantle. Any mountain range that is getting lower, is rising up out of the mantle. I suppose you actually mean "which mountains are getting higher, and which are getting lower." But it's hard to say because you don't have the process clear in your own mind.
Or you could just answer the question. Which ranges are sinking and which are rising?
You still seem unable to decide what you mean by that. Let me do it simpler:
The Himalyas are sinking into the mantle as they pile up from the (measurable) collision of India and the rest of Asia. They are also getting taller. So, are they sinking or rising?
Put a GPS locator on top of them and tell us which are going up and which are going down.
Turns out, GPS isn't so good at vertical movments in the rate of centimeters per year. My Garmin, for example, is accurate to about 20 meters, vertically. Like measuring the width of a hair with a yardstick. But do tell us whether we should consider them sinking, because they are going deeper into the mantle, or rising, because they are getting taller.
Not so simple:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoid
Barbarian observes:Because of the weight of the glaciers in the last ice age, much of North America was depressed by the addtional weight. It has not fully recovered; much of it is still rising up. The upper Midwest and Southern Canada, for example, are still rising from their lowered position during the ice ages. They are also getting warmer. That seems to contradict your new idea.
Yeah .. after how many years?
It's been going on pretty much continuously for the last 13,000 years or so.
You don't think much at all, Stipe. Unless you're past retirement age, you probably shouldn't be calling me "sonny."
The Amazon basin responds rapidly and noticeably to the accumulation of water.
Yeah. Water flows a lot more readily than the mantle. Go figure.
Your evidence supports a "recent" and very dramatic change.
About 13,000 years. Would you like to learn how we know?
Barbarian chuckles:
It pays even more to understand an idea before you present it, Stipe.
Let me know whether you think the Himalayas are sinking or rising, O.K.?