no
Assuming you are not referring to the 'Flintstones - town of Bedrock' and are referring to geological bedrock then any rock that is not part of the soil or an erosional clast (of any size) is bedrock. Bedrock is therefore found everywhere.
The answer is fault
The sudden vibration in the plates inside the crust causes the earths crust to rise & fall.
Most basalt is found in the oceanic plates. Most granite is found in the continental plates.
The earth's crust is not stress
Assuming you are not referring to the 'Flintstones - town of Bedrock' and are referring to geological bedrock then any rock that is not part of the soil or an erosional clast (of any size) is bedrock. Bedrock is therefore found everywhere.
The answer is fault
they move in all sorts of ways like the bottom and the top lol :}
The Earths crust is approximately 650 km deep.
The Earths crust is about 6miles thick and it covers the entire earth even at the bottom of oceans. The crust is only the beginning of the Earth and underneath is the mantle, outer layer and inner core.
The sudden vibration in the plates inside the crust causes the earths crust to rise & fall.
Most basalt is found in the oceanic plates. Most granite is found in the continental plates.
mantle
The earth's crust is not stress
half of earths layer
Below bedrock, there is typically more bedrock, as bedrock is the solid rock layer that lies beneath soil or other loose material on the Earth's surface. It is the lowest point of the Earth's crust.
continental crust