the ozone layer doesn't help sunscreen silly! the ozone layer has harmful rays that can hurt your skin so sunscreen helps protect you from those rays.
NO
The ozone layer is sometimes referred to as the earth's sunscreen as it filters out ultraviolet light.
Ozone layer blocks the UV rays. It does it in the ozone layer.
They both reduce your exposure to ultraviolet radiation.
Simply because the ozone layer is very thin there (and possibly absent altogether). Sunscreen blocks harmful Ultra-Violet rays from the sun.
You have that a bit backwards- the ozone Layer of the Earth's atmosphere protects your skin- by blocking ultraviolet light from the sun. If the ozone layer is reduced, you are exposed to more UV light. You protect yourself from THAT with sunscreen, a hat, long sleeves, and by staying in the shade.
The ozone layer acts as Earth's sunscreen by absorbing and filtering out much of the sun's harmful ultraviolet (UV) radiation. It protects living organisms from the damaging effects of excessive UV radiation, such as skin cancer and cataracts.
Sunscreen with at least SPF 30. It can help protect the skin from harmful UV rays by absorbing or reflecting them. Look for broad-spectrum protection to shield against both UVA and UVB rays. Apply generously and reapply every two hours when outdoors.
Sunscreen is used to protect the skin from ultraviolet radiation emitted primarily by our sun. The ozone layer also protects us from ultraviolet rays, however the current problems with holes in the ozone layer makes wearing sunscreen almost essential if one is going to be outside for an extended period of time.
This "severe burning sunlight" is ultraviolet radiation. The ozone layer is located in the stratosphere, and protects Earth from this radiation. Without it, life on earth would not exist as we know it today.
Ozone does not protect a layer of the atmosphere, it protects the biosphere from the harmful affects of irradiation by the UV component of sunlight - it acts a a sunscreen for the planet.