Both are made of brittle hard rock that is mostly silicate in nature.
No, the oceanic crust is denser. That's why the land areas "float" so much higher than the ocean bedrock.
Continental crust is far older than oceanic crust.
It is not. The oceanic crust is thinner than the continental crust!
Continental crust is the thicker of the two: it extends far beneath and above the Oceanic crust.
The oceanic crust begins at the Mid-Ocean Ridge, where tectonic plates are moving apart, allowing magma to rise and solidify, forming new crust. This process of seafloor spreading creates the youngest oceanic crust at the ridge and older crust farther away from it.
Continental crust is far older than oceanic crust.
Oceanic and Continental crust. Oceanic crust is made of basalt. Continental crust is made of granite
Continental crust is less dense than oceanic crust, so it floats higher on the mantle. This means that the same thickness of continental crust will displace less mantle compared to oceanic crust. Additionally, continental crust is composed of lighter rocks like granites, while oceanic crust is made of denser rocks like basalt.
1. The Oceanic crust is dense while the Continental crust is relatively lighter. 2. The Oceanic crust consists of Silicon and Magnessium, while the Continental crust has Silicon and Alluminium. 3. The Oceanic crust is thin, while the Continental crust is thick. 4. The Oceanic crust makes up the ocean floor, while the Continental crust carries the continents.
The continental crust because it is thicker than the oceanic crust
younger
Continental crust is predominantly composed mostly of rock of a granitic composition, higher in silica and aluminum, with layers of sedimentary rock above. Oceanic crust is predominantly basaltic (higher in iron and magnesium), darker, thinner, more dense, and formed from rapid cooling of lava.