yes. Earths crust is 20 miles thick and the moon"s crust is 40 miles thick.
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 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.
Yes, the crust of Mars is thicker than the crust of Earth.
Astronomers concluded that the crust on Mars must be thicker than Earth's crust because Mars lacks tectonic activity like Earth's plate tectonics, which recycles crustal material. This lack of recycling means that Mars's crust has likely accumulated over a longer period, resulting in a thicker crust compared to Earth's crust.
The largest layer of Earth's surface is the crust, which is divided into oceanic and continental crust. The continental crust is thicker and less dense than the oceanic crust, covering about 40% of the Earth's surface.
Right now scientists do not know why the Earth-facing side of the moon has thicker crust. One proposal is that Earth may have once had two moons that collided at relatively low speeds. The geologically different regions on the moon would then have originated from two separate moons.
On average, it is much thicker than oceanic crust.
The crust is much thinner than the mantle.
The crust is much thinner than the mantle.
No.
Continental crust is the thicker of the two: it extends far beneath and above the Oceanic crust.
The mantle is thicker than the crust. The Earth's crust is relatively thin, with an average thickness of about 5-70 km, while the mantle is much thicker, extending from the base of the crust to a depth of about 2,900 km.