Learn CSS Transforms by Building a Penguin - Step 15

I have a question here, why didn’t (.left-mountain) div allocate at the very top edge of the body as it was expected to do when its position property was set to absolute?
thank you in advance.
My code so far

<!-- file: index.html -->
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  
  <head>
    <meta charset="UTF-8" />
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="./styles.css" />
    <title>Penguin</title>
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
  </head>

  <body>
    <div class="left-mountain"></div>
    <div class="penguin"></div>
    <div class="ground"></div>
  </body>
</html>
/* file: styles.css */
body {
  background: linear-gradient(45deg, rgb(118, 201, 255), rgb(247, 255, 222));
  margin: 0;
  padding: 0;
  width: 100%;
  height: 100vh;
  overflow: hidden;
}


/* User Editable Region */

.left-mountain {
  width: 300px;
  height: 300px;
  background: linear-gradient(rgb(203, 241, 228), rgb(80, 183, 255));
  position:absolute;

}

/* User Editable Region */


.penguin {
  width: 300px;
  height: 300px;
  margin: auto;
  background-color:yellow;
  margin-top: 75px;
}

.ground {
  width: 100vw;
  height: 400px;
  background: linear-gradient(90deg, rgb(88, 175, 236), rgb(182, 255, 255));
  z-index: 3;
  position: absolute;
}

Your browser information:

User Agent is: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/112.0.0.0 Safari/537.36

Challenge: Learn CSS Transforms by Building a Penguin - Step 15

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