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objective 1: layer of the earth 1. briefly describe the composition and…

Question

objective 1: layer of the earth

  1. briefly describe the composition and physical characteristics (solid liquid, gas, semisolid) of each layer of earth.
  2. label all layers of earth.

diagram of earth’s cross - section with numbered labels (1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11) and handwritten labels: 1. solid, 3. mantle, inner core. solid

Explanation:

Response
1. Description of Earth's Layers
Crust (Layer 1, 2, 8, 9)
  • Composition: Made of solid rock (e.g., granite, basalt). Oceanic crust is denser (basalt), continental crust is less dense (granite).
  • Physical State: Solid.
  • Thickness: Continental crust ~30–70 km, oceanic crust ~5–10 km.
Mantle (Layer 3, 6, 7)
  • Composition: Silicate rocks (olivine, pyroxene) with iron/magnesium. Upper mantle has “asthenosphere” (semisolid, flows slowly); lower mantle is more rigid (solid due to pressure).
  • Physical State: Upper mantle (asthenosphere): Semisolid (plastic, flows over time); lower mantle: Solid.
  • Thickness: ~2,900 km (from crust-mantle boundary to mantle-core boundary).
Outer Core (Layer 4, 10)
  • Composition: Liquid iron and nickel.
  • Physical State: Liquid (flows, generates Earth’s magnetic field).
  • Thickness: ~2,200 km (from mantle-core boundary to inner core-outer core boundary).
Inner Core (Labeled “inner core”)
  • Composition: Solid iron and nickel (pressure keeps it solid despite high temperature).
  • Physical State: Solid.
  • Thickness: ~1,220 km (radius of inner core).
2. Labeling the Layers (Based on Typical Earth Layer Diagrams)
  • 1: Continental Crust (solid, upper layer of landmasses).
  • 2: Oceanic Crust (solid, thinner, under oceans).
  • 3: Upper Mantle (includes asthenosphere, semisolid/solid).
  • 4: Mantle-Core Boundary (transition to outer core).
  • 6: Lower Mantle (solid, high-pressure region).
  • 7: Asthenosphere (semisolid, part of upper mantle, allows plate movement).
  • 8: Lithosphere (rigid outer layer: crust + upper mantle, solid).
  • 9: Sedimentary Layer (thin, solid, on crust surface, from erosion/deposition).
  • 10: Outer Core (liquid, iron/nickel).
  • 11: Moho (Mohorovičić discontinuity, boundary between crust and mantle).

(Note: The diagram’s numbering may vary, but this follows standard Earth layer classification. Adjust labels to match the diagram’s structure, e.g., “11” is often the Moho, “10” outer core, etc.)

Answer:

1. Description of Earth's Layers
Crust (Layer 1, 2, 8, 9)
  • Composition: Made of solid rock (e.g., granite, basalt). Oceanic crust is denser (basalt), continental crust is less dense (granite).
  • Physical State: Solid.
  • Thickness: Continental crust ~30–70 km, oceanic crust ~5–10 km.
Mantle (Layer 3, 6, 7)
  • Composition: Silicate rocks (olivine, pyroxene) with iron/magnesium. Upper mantle has “asthenosphere” (semisolid, flows slowly); lower mantle is more rigid (solid due to pressure).
  • Physical State: Upper mantle (asthenosphere): Semisolid (plastic, flows over time); lower mantle: Solid.
  • Thickness: ~2,900 km (from crust-mantle boundary to mantle-core boundary).
Outer Core (Layer 4, 10)
  • Composition: Liquid iron and nickel.
  • Physical State: Liquid (flows, generates Earth’s magnetic field).
  • Thickness: ~2,200 km (from mantle-core boundary to inner core-outer core boundary).
Inner Core (Labeled “inner core”)
  • Composition: Solid iron and nickel (pressure keeps it solid despite high temperature).
  • Physical State: Solid.
  • Thickness: ~1,220 km (radius of inner core).
2. Labeling the Layers (Based on Typical Earth Layer Diagrams)
  • 1: Continental Crust (solid, upper layer of landmasses).
  • 2: Oceanic Crust (solid, thinner, under oceans).
  • 3: Upper Mantle (includes asthenosphere, semisolid/solid).
  • 4: Mantle-Core Boundary (transition to outer core).
  • 6: Lower Mantle (solid, high-pressure region).
  • 7: Asthenosphere (semisolid, part of upper mantle, allows plate movement).
  • 8: Lithosphere (rigid outer layer: crust + upper mantle, solid).
  • 9: Sedimentary Layer (thin, solid, on crust surface, from erosion/deposition).
  • 10: Outer Core (liquid, iron/nickel).
  • 11: Moho (Mohorovičić discontinuity, boundary between crust and mantle).

(Note: The diagram’s numbering may vary, but this follows standard Earth layer classification. Adjust labels to match the diagram’s structure, e.g., “11” is often the Moho, “10” outer core, etc.)