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Questions tagged [crust]

For question dealing with the Earth's crust or other planemos.

1 vote
1 answer
38 views

Mountain formation and stress release?

I have been studying mountain formation, and have some questions about how orogeny and plate stress release are related... Does orogeny contribute to the release of accumulated stress within the ...
sha chow's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
443 views

Do subducted continents rise up again through ridges?

Layman here, sorry if this is a stupid question. I have a geology friend who recently told me that plate tectonics is like how warm milk cools on top to form thin solid layers. The convection cells in ...
AlphaLife's user avatar
  • 133
2 votes
0 answers
80 views

Is the earth crust under the pacific ocean heavier than in the rest of the planet?

Please bear with me, since I don't know much about geography or geology. I was looking at an earth globe and noticed the pacific ocean covers virtually half of the planet (more or less). How is it ...
Joe DiNottra's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
109 views

If the universe (and our galaxy) has about twice as many oxygen atoms as carbon ones, why does Earth have 300 times as many oxygen atoms as carbon?

A (relatively) recent 'Sky & Telescope' magazine feature story mentioned how little carbon the Earth has, and how some scientists' models predict we should somehow have even less.... So I looked ...
Kurt Hikes's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
65 views

Is the Theia impact partly responsible for the distribution of mantle plumes?

I was looking at a map of the distribution of mantle plumes, and was wondering if they could be residual material that was either brought here or affected by the Theia impact. It seems to me that this ...
blacktopshaman's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
43 views

When was the thickness of the Earth's crust calculated?

When was the average thickness of the Earth's crust first calculated or estimated? What did scientists know about the thickness of the Earth's crust before the 20th century? In what interval(s) fell ...
Looky1173's user avatar
  • 111
2 votes
1 answer
44 views

Displacement-Length scaling relationship on extraterrestrial faults

Faults on Earth share a similar displacement/length ratio of around 0.03 which scales from very small faults to very large faults. Would this apply to faults on other planets and if so, are there any ...
Andykins 's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
564 views

Does this support Hapgood's Earth Crust Displacement Theory?

I'm no Geologist by any standard but I'm quite intrigued by what goes on below our feet. I came across this article that states there's a new or (confirmed) partially melted layer in the athenosphere (...
Andyhasaquestion's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
272 views

Why is there gold in the earth's crust?

I would naively assume that when the earth was formed and still molten, all the heavy stuff such as gold would have sunk to the centre, so almost nothing would remain in the earth's crust where humans ...
David Bailey's user avatar
  • 1,017
5 votes
1 answer
174 views

Is there a seismic discontinuity between the lithosphere and asthenosphere?

I've been learning about seismic discontinuities, mainly the 5 defined ones - Conorod discontinuity, Mohorovicic discontinuity, Repetti discontinuity, Gutenberg discontinuity, and Lehmann ...
Sasikuttan's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
701 views

How likely are caverns inside the mantle?

Almost everyone wrongly assumes that the Earth's mantle is liquid, but it isn't (only the outer core is). Is it possible then that there are hollow spaces within the mantle, similar to caves in the ...
Giovanni's user avatar
  • 305
6 votes
2 answers
3k views

If people aim to reach the mantle, why don't they just use volcano craters?

Once in a while aspiring people aim to drill through the Earth's crust to reach the mantle, but why do they want that when the mantle is actually on or very close to the surface in volcano craters? ...
Giovanni's user avatar
  • 305
4 votes
5 answers
179 views

Is There a Correlation Between Earthquake Magnitude and the Deformation Observed in the Rock?

I've been doing a little geology research. One of the topics that I noticed was the existence of "deformations" that appear in the rock layers if an earthquake has occurred. Smaller ...
Mathematician's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
31 views

If all liquid stuff inside the Earth turned solid, what would be the effect?

There are parts inside the Earth (near the core) that are liquid. Presumably causing the Earth's magnetic field (though there are celestial bodies that are completely solid while they have a magnetic ...
Deschele Schilder's user avatar
7 votes
2 answers
815 views

Why should there not be water deep (e.g. below 6 kms) in the Earth's crust?

In 1970, the USSR began drilling at the Kola Super-deep Borehole. The target depth was 15,000 meters; The stated areas of study were the deep structure of the Baltic Shield, seismic discontinuities ...
Conrado's user avatar
  • 173

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