THE STRUCTURE OF EARTH
Earth is the largest terrestrial
planet and one of the most geologically active worlds in the solar
system. It is the only planet temperatures allow surface
water to exist in solid, liquid and gaseous forms, and as we all
know it is (thus far) the only planet we know to be supportive of
life.
Several factors combine to make
Earth the only planet in the solar system hospitable to human life.
It has vast oceans of liquid water and a protective atmosphere rich
in oxygen. It orbits in a stable, nearly circular path, so that
it is never too far from the suns warmth, nor too close. It has
one moon, which is large by the standards of the solar system, that
acts as a kind of gyroscopic stabilizer, preventing the tilt of the
earths spin axis from shifting wildly. Most important of all it
lies within a habitable zone in the solar system, not too near or
too far from the sun...but just right.
On no other planet but earth
does water exist as a liquid, and with salt water oceans covering
71% of the planets surface there is an abundance. The Pacific ocean
reaches a depth of 35,800 feet, but the global average is 12,500.
As well as supporting marine life forms of great variety and abundance,
the ocean plays a vital role in sustaining ground based life. Heat
from the sun evaporates seawater, freshwater moisture precipitates
from this evaporation, cooling the oceans and bringing rain to the
land, where it refreshes lakes, rivers and streams, and eventually
flows back to the sea. All the water in the oceans goes through
this cycle once in two million years.
Each of us is surrounded by
an envelope of air that stretches upward for over 75 miles. Earths
atmosphere is almost entirely made up of just two gases, nitrogen
(78%) and life sustaining oxygen (21%), traces of carbon dioxide
are enough to create a moderate greenhouse effect, a key factor
in retaining the warmth of the sun and preventing extreme temperature
swings from day to night. The atmosphere gets thinner and colder
the higher you go. The densest and warmest part, known as the troposphere,
lies between the surface and an altitude of ten miles. In this zone
air warmed by the sun rises from the service to be continually replaced
with descending particles of cool air. This circulatory pattern
generates most of earths weather. Above the troposphere lies the
stratosphere. This region, which extends to approximately 37 miles
above the surface, is cold and cloudless. If you go higher still,
you would encounter the ozone layer, which absorbs most of the dangerous
ultra violet radiation from the sun. At higher altitudes the air
rarefies even more and temperatures take a dive. In the upper mesosphere,
which lies between 37 and 50 miles above the surface, the temperature
drops to –130F. This is the realm of meteors and auroras. Above
this elevation the atmosphere is so intangible that orbiting satellites
and space crafts undergo little or no atmospheric drag. In the exosphere,
the outer most region of the atmosphere 310 miles above the surface,
the air density is less than one million millionths that of sea
level.
A slice through earth reveals
a series of layers much like those of an onion. The crust, which
is mostly basalt and granite, is only a few miles thick. Below this
is a mantle, composed mainly of metals and igneous rock. This is
the largest portion of the planet, extending from the base of the
crust to a depth of 1800 miles. Below the mantle is a liquid outer
core, of which the material is thought to be composed of iron and
nickel as well as quantities of sulphur and other elements, and
it is 10 times denser than water. Convective currents in the outer
core are believed to produce electrical currents that generate earths
magnetic field. Deeper and denser still is the inner core, where
enormous pressure keeps the nickel iron solid, even though the temperature
is more than 9400F. This planets inner core is 1500 miles in diameter.
Because of the earths abundant
supply of internal heat , our world is very geologically active
by planetary standards. Heat from the interior causes earthquakes
and volcanic eruptions, builds mountains and pushes continents across
the surface. According to the theory of plate tectonics the crust
and part of the upper mantle form a zone that is broken up into
several relatively rigid slabs called plates. Continental drift
occurs when currents in the upper mantle cause these plates to float
as distinct masses a couple of inches each year. here plates collide,
great mountains rise, and where a plate moves over a plume of hot
rock in the mantle, volcanoes form. Recycling of rock by plate tectonics,
as well a s weathering by wind, rain and ice means that the surface
of earth shows little signs of impacts by objects such as comets,
meteorites and asteroids. b
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