Yes, mostly.
Mantle
It is a solid from the liquid outer core all the way to the crust
Gutenburg Discontinuity
The layer beneath the mantle and surrounding the inner core is the outer core. The outer core is composed mostly of liquid iron and nickel. Its movement is responsible for generating Earth's magnetic field.
The answer is the outer core.
The liquid layer of the earth is called the outer core. The outer layer of the earth is the crust. The crust covers the mantle. The mantle covers the outer core. The outer core surrounds the solid enter core.
None! Unless you mean the core. The outer core is liquid.
There are differences in chemistry (the mantle is mainly ultramafic rock--the outer core is metallic), in phase (the mantle is predominately solid--the outer core is liquid), in depth (the outer core is closer to the center of the Earth), and in density (the outer core is more dense).
The liquid part of the Earth is called the outer core, which is a layer beneath the Earth's mantle. It is composed mainly of iron and nickel in a liquid state. The movement of this liquid outer core is responsible for generating the Earth's magnetic field.
A geophysicist may say that the earth has only one layer which is liquid, the outer core. However a hydrologist may also include the hydrosphere, although whether this can truly be considered a layer of the earth is debatable.
The outer core is the only layer of the Earth that is in a liquid state, due to the high temperatures and pressures at that depth. The inner core is solid, while the mantle and crust are primarily solid as well, although the mantle can flow over long time scales.
No. Liquid iron is found in the outer core. There are distinct layers in the earth.