30-50 km.
The thickness of the Earh's crust about 40 km will be at the contenintal crust.
The Earth's crust is most similar in thickness to that of the atmosphere. The Earth's crust varies in thickness from oceanic crust (around 5-10 km) to continental crust (around 20-70 km), which is comparable to the thickness of the atmosphere (around 100 km).
Continental crust.
The Earths Crust can be divided between Oceanic Crust and Continental Crust. Oceanic and Continental Crust are quiet different. The thickness of oceanic crust is between 5km and 10km. It is made of mainly basalt, grabbo and diabise. The thickness of continental crust is between 30km and 50km. It is made up of lighter rocks such as granite.
The oceanic crust.
Inconsistently.
The average is 9 miles.The average continental crust thickness is 22 miles thick. The maximum crust thickness is 56 miles underneath the Himalayas, and is 16 miles thick at its thinnest in various places.The average oceanic crust is about 4 miles thick.For the entire Earth then, the average crust thickness is 9 miles.To scale size, the earths crust would be about the thickness of 3 ordinary sheets of paper on a basketball. The thickness of a chicken eggshell would be 16 pieces of paper on a basketball, so the earths crust is 5 times thinner than a typical egg shell. And the crust is only as thick as the egg shell at its maximum thickness underneath Nepal.Sleep tight.
The oceantic crust is (2-4mi)
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.
Kip
The Earth's crust ranges in thickness from five to 25 miles. It is the outermost layer of the Earth and is divided into two types: continental crust and oceanic crust. Continental crust is thicker than oceanic crust.
The relative thickness of the Earth's crust is similar to the relative thickness of an apple's skin compared to the apple itself. Both the Earth's crust and an apple's skin are thin outer layers in relation to the entire object.