The moon's crust averages between 31 and 37 miles in thickness. The crust on the far side is a bit thicker than the near side.
The Moon's crust is generally thinner than Earth's crust. The Moon's crust is estimated to be roughly 30 to 40 kilometers thick, while Earth's crust is on average about 40 kilometers thick but can be much thicker in some areas like continental crust.
The earth's crust is 1000km thick wow that's alot.!
No. Oceanic crust is about 5km to 10km thick. Continental crust is about 30km to 50km thick.
Crust
No. The dough is the base. Thick and thin are styles.yes
Sicily is famous for thick crust pizza
Oceanic crust is 6 to 11 kilometers thick while the continental crust is 100 kilometers thick, so the continental crust is more than five times as thick as the oceanic crust. I hope this well will help for the future and current time.
The thin part of the crust is called ocean basins. The thick part of the crust is called continents.
The Earths crust is approximately 650 km deep.
yes. Earths crust is 20 miles thick and the moon"s crust is 40 miles thick.
Europa is one of the many moons of Jupiter and one of the four main moons. It is thought to have a liquid water or soft ice layer under a thick layer of surface ice. Ceres (dwarf planet) is also thought to possibly have a water layer under a thin, dusty crust.
continental: 25 to 70 km thick oceanic: 5km to 10km