Yes, a thick layer of ozone covers the entire earth. This layer is called ozone layer and is present in the stratosphere region of atmosphere.
No, the ozone layer is not a single thick layer covering the entire Earth. Instead, it is a region of the stratosphere that contains higher concentrations of ozone gas. The thickness and concentration of this ozone layer vary depending on factors such as location and time of year.
There is a thin layer of ozone that covers entire surface. It is called ozone layer and protect us too.
It covers the entire Earth, twice a year.
The hydrosphere is the liquid layer of the planet Earth, consisting primarily of the oceans. It covers most of the Earth. Above it is the atmosphere, and below it is the lithosphere which is a layer of rock. Some of the lithosphere is exposed, since water does not cover the entire surface. The exposed portion is known as dry land.
crust
The thin outer layer of Earth that covers its entire surface is called the crust. It is made up of solid rock and is the Earth's thinnest layer. The crust is divided into several large and small tectonic plates that float on the semi-liquid mantle beneath them.
lithosphere
The ozone is present inside the atmosphere. And yes, it covers the whole of the earth.
The entire Earth spins. No layer has a rotation rate the differs significantly from the rest of the planet. If any layer did the results would be catastrophic. The magnetic field is the result of convection currents in the outer core.
Ozone concentration increases with decreasing altitude to a maximum value, then drops of to near zero at the Earth's surface. The region of high concentration is called a layer, because it covers the entire Earth, and is confined to a few kilometers in height / thickness.
The Earthâ??s crust is the part of the planet that we live on. It is a thin rocky layer that only makes up about 1 percent of the entire mass of Earth.
The Earths crust is about 6miles thick and it covers the entire earth even at the bottom of oceans. The crust is only the beginning of the Earth and underneath is the mantle, outer layer and inner core.