No. The combined thickness of the inner and outer core is about 3500 to 3520 kilometers, out of the Earth's total radius of about 6370 kilometers. This means that the combination of inner solid core and liquid outer core has about 16% of the Earth's volume.
*The reference to "1% of the Earth's volume" may refer to the Earth's crust, which has about "1% of the Earth's total mass."
Mercury's mass = 0.055 x Earths, Volume = 0.056 x Earths Mars' mass = 0.1075 x Earths, Volume = 0.151 x Earths Venus' mass = 0.815 x Earths, Volume = 0.857 x Earths (Earth) mass = 1 x Earths, Volume = 1 x Earths Uranus' mass = 14.536 x Earths, Volume = 63.086 x Earths Neptune's mass = 17.147 x Earths, Volume = 57.74 x Earths Saturn's mass = 95.152 x Earths, Volume = 763.59 x Earths Jupiter's mass = 317.8 x Earths, Volume = 1321.3 x Earths
The crust occupies less than 1% of Earth's volume.
Mercury (smallest), Mars, Venus, Earth, Neptune, Uranus, Saturn and Jupiter (largest). Note that although Neptune has more mass than Uranus, it is smaller in size. Mercury's volume = 0.056 x Earths Mars' volume = 0.151 x Earths Venus' volume = 0.857 x Earths (Earth) volume = 1 x Earths Neptune's volume = 57.74 x Earths Uranus' volume = 63.086 x Earths Saturn's volume = 763.59 x Earths Jupiter's volume = 1321.3 x Earths
Mercury's volume = 0.056 x Earths (6.08x1010 km3) Venus' volume = 0.857 x Earths (9.38x1011 km3) (Earth) volume = 1 x Earths (1.08x1012 km3) Mars' volume = 0.151 x Earths (1.63x1011 km3) Jupiter's volume = 1321.3 x Earths (1.43x1015 km3) Saturn's volume = 763.59 x Earths (8.2713x1014 km3) Uranus' volume = 63.086 x Earths (6.833x1013 km3) Neptune's volume = 57.74 x Earths (6.254x1013 km3)
The Earth's core will continue to have heat for billions of years. It is estimated that the core will remain hot for another 1 to 1.5 billion years before it cools down significantly.
Mercury's volume is equivalent to 0.056 x Earths Venus' volume = 0.857 x Earths (Earth) volume = 1 x Earths Mars' volume = 0.151 x Earths Jupiter's volume = 1321.3 x Earths Saturn's volume = 763.59 x Earths Uranus' volume = 63.086 x Earths Neptune's volume = 57.74 x Earths
Mercury's mass = 0.055 x Earths, Volume = 0.056 x Earths Mars' mass = 0.1075 x Earths, Volume = 0.151 x Earths Venus' mass = 0.815 x Earths, Volume = 0.857 x Earths (Earth) mass = 1 x Earths, Volume = 1 x Earths Uranus' mass = 14.536 x Earths, Volume = 63.086 x Earths Neptune's mass = 17.147 x Earths, Volume = 57.74 x Earths Saturn's mass = 95.152 x Earths, Volume = 763.59 x Earths Jupiter's mass = 317.8 x Earths, Volume = 1321.3 x Earths
763.59 Earths can be contained in Saturn (by volume)
The Earth can be divided into four main layers: the solid crust on the outside, the mantle, the outer core and the inner core. Out of them, the crust is the thinnest layer of the Earth, amounting for less than 1% of our planet's volume .
1/4
The crust occupies less than 1% of Earth's volume.
Population: Werewolves: 15 percent of earths population Vampires: 45.2 percent of the earths population Humans: 2 percent of the earths population wookies: 1 percent of the earths population witches and warlocks: 5.8 percent of earths population Actual real animals (you know normal stuff): 31 percent of the earths population
The Earths crust.
Mercury (smallest), Mars, Venus, Earth, Neptune, Uranus, Saturn and Jupiter (largest). Note that although Neptune has more mass than Uranus, it is smaller in size. Mercury's volume = 0.056 x Earths Mars' volume = 0.151 x Earths Venus' volume = 0.857 x Earths (Earth) volume = 1 x Earths Neptune's volume = 57.74 x Earths Uranus' volume = 63.086 x Earths Saturn's volume = 763.59 x Earths Jupiter's volume = 1321.3 x Earths
Mercury's volume = 0.056 x Earths (6.08x1010 km3) Venus' volume = 0.857 x Earths (9.38x1011 km3) (Earth) volume = 1 x Earths (1.08x1012 km3) Mars' volume = 0.151 x Earths (1.63x1011 km3) Jupiter's volume = 1321.3 x Earths (1.43x1015 km3) Saturn's volume = 763.59 x Earths (8.2713x1014 km3) Uranus' volume = 63.086 x Earths (6.833x1013 km3) Neptune's volume = 57.74 x Earths (6.254x1013 km3)
Type your answer here... 1 percent water 2 percent ice
With a very sizable iron core and a (by comparison) wafer-thin crust, I doubt that the earth's crust even approximates a full percentage point.