Earth's crust is far thicker under the continents.
The crust is typically thicker beneath continents compared to oceans. Continental crust can be up to 40 km thick, while oceanic crust is generally around 5-10 km thick.
Continents and oceans are found on Earth's crust, which is the outermost layer of the Earth. The continents are made up of thicker continental crust, while the oceans are located on thinner oceanic crust.
Earths crust extend deeper below the continents than below the oceans basins (or at least this is what I think).
The crust that makes up the continents, or land masses on Earth is called continental crust. The crust that makes up the oceans is called oceanic crust.
Earth's crust is far thicker under the continents.
The Earth's crust is thinnest under the oceans due to oceanic crust being thinner and denser, while it is thickest through the continents where continental crust is thicker and less dense. The difference in thickness is due to the process of plate tectonics, where oceanic crust is constantly being created at mid-ocean ridges and destroyed at subduction zones.
No, the Earth's crust is not of uniform thickness. It is thicker beneath continents and thinner beneath oceans, resulting in variations in crustal thickness across different regions of the world.
The crust is typically thicker under the continental shelf compared to under the oceans. This is because the continental crust is made of lighter granite rocks which are less dense than the basaltic rocks of the oceanic crust, resulting in thicker continental crust.
The crust is the outer or surface layer of the planet.
continents
The layer that includes the land making up continents and the land under the ocean is the crust, which is the outermost layer of the Earth's surface. It is divided into continental crust, which forms the continents, and oceanic crust, which lies beneath the oceans.
Earth's crust is composed of the continents and the ocean floor.