at the bottom of the ocean
Some volcanoes form over thin places in the Earth's crust called hotspots. These hotspots are areas where magma rises to the surface, resulting in volcanic activity.
Igneous and metamorphic rock make up 95% of the rocks in Earth's crust. Only a thin layer is made up of sedimentary rock.
The thin solid outermost layer above the mantle is the crust, and the crust is the layer we live on.
it is the crust because the crust is thin and rigid with rock
A thin place on Earth's crust where a volcano can form is called a "hotspot." This is a location where magma from the mantle rises to the surface, often creating volcanic activity. As the magma erupts through the Earth's crust, it can result in the formation of volcanic features like volcanoes, lava flows, and volcanic islands.
crust
Continental rifts, such as the East African Rift Zone, are often underlain by thin crust. This thinning of the crust is due to tectonic forces that are pulling the continent apart, causing the crust to stretch and thin in these regions.
The crust :3
The percentage of Earth's crust is less than one percentage in terms of Earth's volume. The Earth's crust is actually a thin layer.
I think it's the crust, but I'm not completely sure.
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.
Some volcanoes form over thin places in the Earth's crust called hotspots. These hotspots are areas where magma rises to the surface, resulting in volcanic activity.
this is the crust which is the very thin layer which has land in the water
Igneous and metamorphic rock make up 95% of the rocks in Earth's crust. Only a thin layer is made up of sedimentary rock.
The thin solid outermost layer above the mantle is the crust, and the crust is the layer we live on.
No. The dough is the base. Thick and thin are styles.yes
The thin part of the crust is called ocean basins. The thick part of the crust is called continents.