Hello Dave,
I did a lot of research sometime back on re-sampling downward. I was comparing the difference between full-size RAW on my Sigma SD10 and half-size RAW which is straight from the sensor using 2x2 binning of pixels.
I found these two references that made very good sense:
http://bvdwolf.home.xs4all.nl/main/f...own_sample.htm
http://www.glennchan.info/broadcast-...-artifacts.htm
The halo in your image could be "ringing" per the second reference above.
The nearer mountains are very dark against the sky, and a well-focused, optimum lens setting (e.g. f/5.6 or f/8) would provide a "sharp edge" test of your camera sensor, internal processing and your editor. Ringing is where the image brightness is going from e.g. dark to light but there is an overshoot (if there's enough headroom).
[
edit: I just pixel-peeped and it's not just the mountain tops. It's everywhere there's edges with some contrast, just not as noticeable. So the first reference is perhaps more relevant than the second]
The first reference makes an excellent case for never using bicubic "sharper" when re-sizing downward, but the reference is more about reduction of moire. Still good reading.
So, you could try approx 0.3 to 0.7 gaussian blur to the original and then downsize straight bicubic.