Rock and look the other one up at ask.com or another recourse
The two layers of the lithosphere is made up of the oceanic lithosphere and continental lithosphere. The oceanic lithosphere is associated with oceanic crust and the ocean basins. The continental lithosphere is associated with the continental crust.
Iron and Diamond.
The crust and the hard uppermost mantle make up the lithosphere, which is the solid, rocky layer covering the entire surface of the planet and reacts to stresses as a brittle solid. The lithosphere ranges in thickness from 50 - 200 kmA and is fragmented into tectonic plates with boundaries where plates collide, diverge, or grind past each other.A Wilson, M. (2000) Igneous Petrogenesis - A Global Tectonic Approach, Chapman and Hall, London.
Together the crust and upper mantle make the lithosphere.
Convection currents rotate in the Lithosphere, which causes the surface of the Earth to move.
The two layers of the lithosphere is made up of the oceanic lithosphere and continental lithosphere. The oceanic lithosphere is associated with oceanic crust and the ocean basins. The continental lithosphere is associated with the continental crust.
Earth's crust and the very top of the mantle form the lithosphere
Bohrium is made up of two compounds.......................LOSER and WHATEVER
The uppermost mantle and the crust makes the lithosphere.
The lithosphere is a combination of the crust and the brittle uppermost mantle.
There are actually three - metamorphic, igneous, and sedimentary
No compounds make up elements. Elements make up compounds, so there are no compounds in cadmium since it is an element.
Any rocks that looks like lithosphere!
The lithosphere.
Iron and Diamond.
The crust and the hard uppermost mantle make up the lithosphere, which is the solid, rocky layer covering the entire surface of the planet and reacts to stresses as a brittle solid. The lithosphere ranges in thickness from 50 - 200 kmA and is fragmented into tectonic plates with boundaries where plates collide, diverge, or grind past each other.A Wilson, M. (2000) Igneous Petrogenesis - A Global Tectonic Approach, Chapman and Hall, London.
Helium is an element. It is the second element on the periodic table, therefore containing two protons. It is not made of compounds.