Social Sciences, asked by pramodbussa, 4 months ago

How is the lithosphere formed?​

Answers

Answered by jayashreejayasmita5
0

Explanation:

As the earth cooled, there was no climate to trap the warmth. The surface chilled quick because of the cool temperature of room (like how the highest point of espresso chills when presented to the air). This made a layer of cooled shake that hardened into the outside. Contrasts in magma made two sorts of the lithosphere, maritime and mainland, portrayed by the basalt in seas and stone in the landmasses.  

The lithosphere changes its profundity. Underneath landmasses, the lithosphere is most profound and the foundations of mountain ranges go down several miles (like an ice sheet, there is more underneath).

The organizations of each sort of covering change at plate limits, where new shakes are shaped from normal minerals in the two outside layers or one is transformed into different rocks. Maritime lithosphere turns out to be thick due to eclogite close subduction zones thus it dives underneath the light mainland covering into the mantle.

Answered by DangerousBomb
2

The lithosphere is made up of rocks from two of the Earth's major layers. It contains all of the outer, thin shell of the planet, called the crust, and the uppermost part of the next-lower layer, the mantle. ... WHEN EARTH WAS FORMED DIFFERENCES IN MAGMA CREATED TWO TYPES OF LITHOSPHERE.

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