The crust is the cool part of the Earth. It is the surface we live on. It should be at a comfortable temperature until it reaches down to the mantle, the next layer. That area will be hotter. Then at the center, is the core. That is the hot part of the Earth's interior. It is about 3500° C. Estimates vary from 2000 to 7000, but it is HOT!
About 447 in Fahrenheit
No, the inner part of the Earth's crust is not hot melted rock. The inner core of the Earth is made up of solid iron and nickel, while the outer core is composed of liquid iron and nickel. The hot melted rock is found in the mantle layer beneath the crust.
The Earth's crust typically ranges in temperature from about 200 to 400 degrees Celsius.
The lower crust is denser and more mafic in composition compared to the upper crust, which is less dense and more felsic. The lower crust is also usually deeper in the Earth's crust compared to the upper crust.
Both Earth's crust and boiling milk form a thin, outer layer with a relatively lower density compared to what lies beneath them. Additionally, they can both experience a form of movement - the Earth's crust in the process of plate tectonics, and milk in the boiling process as it churns and bubbles.
The lithosphere, i am suggesting, it's otherwise known as "crust". Crust is the top layer of Earth. Everything beneath it is hot, unlike the crust, the crust is cool making it the temperature for our feet not to burn.
Well, the earth's crust is like hot rock, but not melted.
2.25
400 degrees
50 to 300 degrees f.
magma
No, the inner part of the Earth's crust is not hot melted rock. The inner core of the Earth is made up of solid iron and nickel, while the outer core is composed of liquid iron and nickel. The hot melted rock is found in the mantle layer beneath the crust.
The user Alliaabunaim said, "No because Earth's crust is way too hot to stand."This is not correct. People have seen the Earth's crust. Look outside at the ground. Did you do it? Well if you did, congratulations to you! You have officially seen Earth's crust!I believe that Alliaabunaim may have been thinking of Earth's core, which is far to hot for humans, or even machines to stand!
cause it is not hot
Geothermal
Springs with hot water, also known as hot springs, occur when geothermally heated water rises to the surface through cracks in the Earth's crust. This happens when groundwater seeps into the Earth's crust, is heated by magma, and then returns to the surface as hot water.
From near the Earth's core. The mantle, located beneath the Earth's crust, is where hot melted rock, known as magma, originates. This magma can rise towards the surface through volcanic activity.
volcano