Very broadly this may be referred to as bedrock. That is the upper boundary of solid rock below any superficial soil deposits.
On a whole Earth scale you may be referring to the crust / lithosphere depending on if you were considering earth based on it's chemical compositional layering or it's mechanical properties, whereby the crust is the outer hard rocky layer of the earth that is composed of broadly more silica rich rocks than the underlying mantle which is composed of rocks enriched in iron and magnesium and the lithosphere is the term used to describe that portion of the Earth that behaves as an elastic brittle solid and responds to large stresses by the formation of fractures (faulting) and which combines the crust and the solid brittle portion of the upper mantle.
No, the Earth's surface is not entirely covered by a continuous layer of solid rock. The Earth's surface is made up of various types of materials, including rock, soil, water, and vegetation. The distribution of these materials varies across different regions due to factors such as geological processes and human activities.
The nearly continuous shell of rock around the Earth is the lithosphere. It consists of the Earth's crust and the upper part of the mantle, and it is divided into tectonic plates that float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere below. The lithosphere is where most geological activity, such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, occurs.
The rock cycle is a continuous and dynamic process that describes how rocks are formed, changed, and recycled on Earth's surface through various geological processes like weathering, erosion, melting, and solidification.
'Magma' is melted rock occurring under the Earth's surface. When it comes up and flows out on the Earth's surface it is called 'lava'.
Igneous rock can form deep below the surface as intrusive igneous rock, or on or near the surface as extrusive igneous rock. X Answer is: Igneous
No, the Earth's surface is not entirely covered by a continuous layer of solid rock. The Earth's surface is made up of various types of materials, including rock, soil, water, and vegetation. The distribution of these materials varies across different regions due to factors such as geological processes and human activities.
The amount of rock at Earth's surface stays constant due to the rock cycle, a continuous process of creation, destruction, and recycling of rock materials. Rocks are constantly being formed, broken down, and transformed through processes like weathering, deposition, and erosion, maintaining a balance in the overall amount of rock present at the surface of the Earth.
The rock cycle is a continuous and dynamic process that describes how rocks are formed, changed, and recycled on Earth's surface through various geological processes like weathering, erosion, melting, and solidification.
The nearly continuous shell of rock around the Earth is the lithosphere. It consists of the Earth's crust and the upper part of the mantle, and it is divided into tectonic plates that float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere below. The lithosphere is where most geological activity, such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, occurs.
The forces that drive the rock cycle beneath the earth's surface are not the same as the forces that drive the rock cycle on or near earth's surface because the processes of the rock cycle beneath the earth surface and above the earth surface are diffferent.
Molten rock on the Earth's surface is called lava.
Magma is under the surface of Earth's crust. Rocks on earth's surface are well ... on Earth's surface. Magma is also molten rock, not solid rock like the rocks on earth's surface.
'Magma' is melted rock occurring under the Earth's surface. When it comes up and flows out on the Earth's surface it is called 'lava'.
rock rock
No. A rock formed below earth's surface as magma is an igneous rock.
Molten rock on the surface of the Earth is called lava.
Igneous rock can form deep below the surface as intrusive igneous rock, or on or near the surface as extrusive igneous rock. X Answer is: Igneous