Yes. There is information there only available through close inspection.
By observing everything; gravity - topography - seismology (especially seismology) - density - the effect of other heavenly bodies, such as the Moon - samples brought up by volcanoes - drilling in deep ocean areas where the crust is thin - the magnetic field - the behavior of earthquakes - other planets - etc. By doing this, and analyzing everything, scientists have been able to piece together theories, confirm them, and test them against new theories. Its all part of the scientific process.
surface
earths mantle is made of silicon,iron,aluminum,calcium,sodium,potassium,magnesium,and mostly oxygen
Our planet is warmed by conduction (heat from the mantle below), convection (tropical heat is transferred to the poles by wind and currents) and radiation (primarily the warmth of the sun, though there's also radioactive decay occurring in our planet's core).
Mantle Is The Below Layer Of The Crust In Earth.
The Kola Superdeep Borehole in Russia is the deepest man-made hole in the world, reaching a depth of about 7.5 miles (12 kilometers). This project aimed to study the Earth's crust and explore the possibility of drilling to the Earth's mantle. Currently, no drilling rig has penetrated into the Earth's mantle.
mantle
you will find it in earths mantle because it is a kind of an igneous rock
the earths mantle is very hot were cornstarch is not hot at all
the earths mantle is very hot were cornstarch is not hot at all
The three parts that make up the Earths mantle are the crust, core, and mantle.
The mantle is counted as the middle part of the earth
No. The Earth's mantle is a ductile solid.
Decay of radioactive elements in the mantle heats it.
Mantle.
no
The mantle is located right under Earth's crust.