No, The crust is solid. The oceans just happen to sit on top of it.
No, the crust is solid, the core is liquid.
The oceanic crust itself is made of solid rock.
Pizza crust is a solid. It is made from a dough mixture that is baked until it solidifies into a firm, bread-like texture.
The Moho, short for Mohorovičić discontinuity, is a boundary in the Earth's crust that separates the solid crust from the underlying mantle. So, the Moho is where the solid crust transitions into the solid mantle, but it is not a solid or liquid layer itself.
Thankfully, the solid layer of the Earth's crust is the outer, solid land we live on.
The crust on Earth's surface is solid.
The oceanic crust is primarily made of solid rock, primarily basalt. However, beneath the oceanic crust, there is a layer of partially molten rock called the mantle that flows slowly over time.
No. It is a solid.
The solid portion of the Earth consists of the crust, mantle, and core. The crust is the outermost layer made of solid rock. Beneath the crust is the mantle, which is a semi-solid layer that flows slowly over time. The core is the innermost layer and is composed mostly of solid iron and nickel.
It is a solid from the liquid outer core all the way to the crust
It is both solid and liquid because the crust is a layer of solid rock that includes both dry land and the ocean floor the main elements in the crust are oxygen and silicon =]
No, the Earth is made up of solid and liquid materials. The Earth's composition includes a solid inner core, a liquid outer core, a solid mantle, and a solid crust. The atmosphere, which is composed of gases, surrounds the Earth.