thumb|upright=1.4|Vertical distance comparison
thumb|upright=1.4|Vertical distance comparison
The elevation of a geographic location is its height above or below a fixed reference point, most commonly a reference geoid, a mathematical model of the Earth's sea level as an equipotential gravitational surface (see Geodetic datum § Vertical datum). The term elevation is mainly used when referring to points on the Earth's surface, while altitude or geopotential height is used for points above the surface, such as an aircraft in flight or a spacecraft in orbit, and depth is used for points below the surface. thumb|upright=1.5|Elevation histogram of the Earth's surface
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).