Day Five Lesson

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Earth’s Layers
What's below our feet? What's way below?
If we could cut Earth open, we'd see the inner core at the center, then the outer core, the mantle
in the middle and the crust on the outside. If you are talking about plates, though, there's the
brittle lithosphere riding on the plastic asthenosphere. Whew!
Layers by Composition The layers scientists recognize are pictured below
A cross section of Earth showing the following layers: (1) crust (2) mantle (3a) outer core (3b) inner core (4) lithosphere (5)
asthenosphere (6) outer core (7) inner core.
Core, mantle, and crust are divisions based on composition:
1. The crust is less than 1% of Earth by mass. The two types are oceanic crust and
continental crust. Continental crust is felsic and oceanic crust is mafic.
2. The mantle is hot, ultramafic rock. It represents about 68% of Earth's mass.
3. The core is mostly iron metal. The core makes up about 31% of the Earth.
Layers by Mechanical Properties
Lithosphere and asthenosphere are divisions based on mechanical properties:
1. The lithosphere is composed of both the crust and the portion of the upper mantle
and behaves as a brittle, rigid solid.
2. The asthenosphere is partially molten upper mantle material and behaves
plastically and can flow.
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Summary
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By composition, Earth is divided into core, mantle, and crust.
By mechanical properties, the crust and upper mantle are divided into lithosphere
and asthenosphere.
Continental crust is felsic, oceanic crust is mafic, the mantle is ultramafic, and the
core is metallic.
Review
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4.
What are the layers of Earth based on composition and where are they located?
What is the composition of the different layers?
How do the lithosphere and asthenosphere differ from each other?
Based on this information why do you think earthquake and volcanic activity occur.
Answer in detail.
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