The Earth's mantle is about 2,890 km (or 1,800 mi) thick.
No. The Earth's mantle is a ductile solid.
The upper mantle of Earth begins just beneath the crust, which ranges in thickness from about 5-70 km (3-44 miles) depending on the location. The upper mantle extends to a depth of about 670 km (416 miles) beneath the Earth's surface, marking the boundary with the lower mantle.
mantle
Continents drift on top of the upper mantle. The core is much further down.
The mantle is hotter than the crust.
410km
The earths mantle is one of the four major layers, laying between the crust and the outer core. At 2885 kilometers, it is the thickest layer.
The thickness of the mantle is about 2891km thick according to the USGS. Checkout the website to learn more about the Earth's interior. http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/interior/
Earths mantle is less dense and very hot. The mantle is 2885km thick.
the crust is the thickness of earths layers
The thickness of the Earth's mantle is about 2900 km and it's upper boundary is about 100km deep. There is a really cool cutaway drawing available by using the Wikipedia link.
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
half of earths layer
The three parts that make up the Earths mantle are the crust, core, and mantle.