>>/25355/
> I get what you mean
No. I see you don't.
The Urals - for example - is a bump. There is no time in a year, when in the hills are covered in snow but the their feet is lush green. Also no time in the year when up there is lush green and down the feet is dried out.
I don't think even Altai has that feature. When winter comes, all Inner Asia turns to frozen "hell". Nowhere to go for lush green pastures.
Hungary is horrible to nomadism because when the winter comes there is no place with greenery. Everything is covered in snow. And when it is summer there's no north to go or no mountains to climb for pastures. Also Hungarians lived the same before they arrived here.
Maybe the closest such mountain with the climate is the Kilimanjaro. Err, no, during upper paleolithic, mesolitic, and maybe early neolithic in Mesopotamia nomads lived. I think a Czech, Petr Charvát mentions in his book I can't remember the title.
Nomads follow the vegetation to live the same all year round. Steppe people don't live the same all year round.