No, the atmoshpere is not part of the geosphere.
The geosphere is the crust/land part of the Earth,
while the atmosphere is the air.
1. When the volcanoes erupted, they produce many carbon dioxide and other gases which then will be released into the atmosphere. 2. When rocks form there might be some air bubbles in the rocks because of the air trapped in the rocks while in the process of the formation of the rocks. That is why you see some holes in rocks. 3. A much slower process of the geosphere known as plate tectonics also influences the atmosphere. As the continental and oceanic plates of the earth's outer crust break up, shift, and pass over one another, the relative positions of the continents and oceans change throughout geologic time, causing weather and climatic patterns to change as well. Hope that helps :)
The three layers of the geosphere are the crust, mantle, and core. The crust is the outermost layer and is divided into continental and oceanic crust. The mantle lies beneath the crust and is divided into the upper and lower mantle. The core is the innermost layer and is further divided into the outer core and inner core.
The carbon cycle is a process where carbon is removed and returned to the atmosphere. The ways of returning carbon to the atmosphere are- 1. Respiration 2. Decomposition 3. Combustion Ways of removing carbon- Photosynthesis. The CO2 in the air is taken in by green plants for photosynthesis. The green plants die eventually and is decomposed; decomposition return carbon to the atmosphere. Animals respire and return carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Decomposers respire as well. Green plants can be used to make fuels, which combust to return carbon dioxide to the air.
The three main parts of the Earth are the crust (outer layer), mantle (middle layer), and core (innermost part). The crust is the thinnest layer and where we find land and oceans, the mantle is made up of solid rock that flows slowly over time, and the core is composed of a mostly iron-nickel alloy.
The 3 types of gases in Earth's atmosphere are argon, oxygen and nitrogen.
the biosphere, the atmosphere, and the geosphere
the atmosphere, hydrosphere,geosphere,and biosphere
1. When the volcanoes erupted, they produce many carbon dioxide and other gases which then will be released into the atmosphere. 2. When rocks form there might be some air bubbles in the rocks because of the air trapped in the rocks while in the process of the formation of the rocks. That is why you see some holes in rocks. 3. A much slower process of the geosphere known as plate tectonics also influences the atmosphere. As the continental and oceanic plates of the earth's outer crust break up, shift, and pass over one another, the relative positions of the continents and oceans change throughout geologic time, causing weather and climatic patterns to change as well. Hope that helps :)
poopey doopey
Through absorption, refraction, and reflection.
farting, pooping, and driving your broom broom cars
first of all it helps by : 1. the atmosphere gives earths animals or creations air to breath 2. the atmosphere helps plants grow 3.
Three ways heat is transferred through the atmosphere are conduction (direct contact between molecules), convection (through vertical movement of air masses), and radiation (transfer of heat through electromagnetic waves).
The 5 spheres on the Earth are; 1. Biosphere. 2. Atmosphere. 3. Lithosphere. 4. Hydrosphere. 5. Cryosphere.
three ways water reaches from earth to atmosphere are 1. direct evaporation from the water bodies like sea,river,oceans 2. moisture from the land(you must have seen land dries out) 3.moisture from the plant(small capillaries from the plants sucks water from land n goes to atmosphere in form of vapour from leaves)
3*2*1 = 6 ways.3*2*1 = 6 ways.3*2*1 = 6 ways.3*2*1 = 6 ways.
The three layers of the geosphere are the crust, mantle, and core. The crust is the outermost layer and is divided into continental and oceanic crust. The mantle lies beneath the crust and is divided into the upper and lower mantle. The core is the innermost layer and is further divided into the outer core and inner core.