The pressure from the outer core, mantle, and crust sqeeze it to a solid although is is fiery hot.
The innermost layer, the inner core, is very hot but not molten.
Molten rock material below the earth's surface is called magma.lava
/The Outer Core
Assuming that the Earth's atmosphere is a perfect sphere, then the atmosphere's center of mass will be at the point equidistant between Earth's poles (i.e. the center of the Earth!).
Not quite. Wherever you are on the Earth's surface, the Earth's 'center' is roughly 4,000 miles down. The deepest hole ever dug into the Earth began in 1970, on Russia's Kola Peninsula, near the Norwegian border. 24 years later, in 1994, the final depth of 12,262 meters was reached. That's about 7.62 miles, or 0.2 percent of the distance to the center. Before that, the previous record holder was the Bertha Rogers gas well in Oklahoma. It was stopped in 1974, when it struck molten sulfur at 32,000 feet. That's about 6.1 miles, or 0.15 percent of the distance to the center.
no it's molten metals
The center of the earth is the core. It is full of molten hot magma. It is generally pictured as red when seen in drawings.
The center of the earth is the core. It is full of molten hot magma. It is generally pictured as red when seen in drawings.
The innermost layer, the inner core, is very hot but not molten.
becuase my dicks hard
No the centre of the earth id made up of molten rock and magma.
The center of the earth that we live on is called the earth's core.
No. The center of the earth is commonly believed to be hot molten rock surrounding a solid, super-heated alloy of metals including iron, nickel, gold, and platinum.
You would die. The center of the earth is composed of molten iron at very high pressure. I agree with above. You would die.
No it isn't. It is a fictional book. The centre of the earth is molten rock so no-one would be able to get there.
The center of the Earth is molten metal at a temperature of about 12,000 degrees Fahrenheit. If there are worms living there, they're very different from the ones we're used to.
I may be incorrect, but I think that the answer is the mantel.