Earth’s crust

geology
Also known as: crust

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

  • magnetization

composition and structure

    chemical elements

    • geochemical cycle
      In chemical element: Solar system

      The chemical composition of Earth’s crust, oceans, and atmosphere can be studied, but this is only a minute fraction of the mass of Earth, and there are many composition differences even within this small sample. Some information about the chemical properties of Earth’s unobserved interior can be obtained by…

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    • geochemical cycle
      In chemical element: Early history of the Earth

      …on the composition of the Earth’s crust is available in the form of thousands of analyses of individual rocks, the average of which provides a reasonably precise estimate of the bulk composition. For the mantle and the core the information is indirect and thus much less precise. The origin of…

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    • alkali metals
      • periodic table
        In alkali metal

        4 percent of Earth’s crust. The other alkali metals are considerably more rare, with rubidium, lithium, and cesium, respectively, forming 0.03, 0.007, and 0.0007 percent of Earth’s crust. Francium, a natural radioactive isotope, is very rare and was not discovered until 1939.

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    • barium
      • barium
        In barium: Occurrence, properties, and uses

        03 percent of Earth’s crust, chiefly as the minerals barite (also called barytes or heavy spar) and witherite. Between six and eight million tons of barite are mined every year, more than half of it in China. Lesser amounts are mined in India, the United States, and Morocco.…

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    • iridium
      • iridium
        In iridium

        …nature; its abundance in the Earth’s crust is very low, about 0.001 parts per million. Though rare, iridium does occur in natural alloys with other noble metals: in iridosmine up to 77 percent iridium, in platiniridium up to 77 percent, in aurosmiridium 52 percent, and in native platinum up to…

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    • oxygen group elements
    • phosphorus
      • phosphorus
        In phosphorus: Occurrence and distribution

        …distributed element—12th most abundant in Earth’s crust, to which it contributes about 0.10 weight percent. Its cosmic abundance is about one atom per 100 atoms of silicon, the standard. Its high chemical reactivity assures that it does not occur in the free state (except in a few meteorites). Phosphorus always…

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    • tellurium
      • tellurium
        In tellurium

        …one part per billion of Earth’s crust. Like selenium, it is less often found uncombined than as compounds of metals such as copper, lead, silver, or gold and is obtained chiefly as a by-product of the refining of copper or lead. No large use for tellurium has been found.

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    petrology

      • feldspar
        • Figure 1: Schematic diagram showing ordered (left) and disordered (right) arrays within a structure having two kinds of sites (type 1 and type 2) and two types of occupants (x atoms and y atoms). In the ordered structure all x atoms are distributed uniformly in the spaces between the y atoms, whereas in the disordered structure no regular arrangement obtains.
          In feldspar

          …up more than half of Earth’s crust, and professional literature about them constitutes a large percentage of the literature of mineralogy.

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      • metamorphic rocks
      • sedimentary rocks
        • chemistry of sedimentary rocks
          In sedimentary rock

          …sedimentary rocks are confined to Earth’s crust, which is the thin, light outer solid skin of Earth ranging in thickness from 40–100 kilometres (25 to 62 miles) in the continental blocks to 4–10 kilometres in the ocean basins. Igneous and metamorphic rocks constitute the bulk of the crust. The total…

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      • silica mineral
        • Smoky quartz from St. Gotthard, Switz.
          In silica mineral: General considerations

          …up approximately 26 percent of Earth’s crust by weight and are second only to the feldspars in mineral abundance. Free silica occurs in many crystalline forms with a composition very close to that of silicon dioxide, 46.75 percent by weight being silicon and 53.25 percent oxygen. Quartz is by far…

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      geologic history

        • Archean Eon
          • Archean Eon
            In Archean Eon

            …with the formation of Earth’s crust and extended to the start of the Proterozoic Eon 2.5 billion years ago; the latter is the second formal division of Precambrian time. The Archean Eon was preceded by the Hadean Eon, an informal division of geologic time spanning from about 4.6 billion to…

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        • atmosphere development
        • geochronology
          • Morrison Formation
            In dating: Multiple ages for a single rock: the thermal effect

            …evident that many parts of Earth’s crust have experienced reheating temperatures above 300 °C—i.e., reset mica ages are very common in rocks formed at deep crustal levels. Vast areas within the Canadian Shield, which have identical ages reflecting a common cooling history, have been identified. These are called geologic provinces.…

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          • Morrison Formation
            In dating: Rhenium–osmium method

            … and extremely depleted in the crust, so that crustal osmium must have exceedingly high radiogenic-to-stable ratios while the mantle values are low. In fact, crustal levels are so low that they are extremely difficult to measure with current technology. Most work to date has centred around rhenium- or osmium-enriched minerals.…

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          • In geologic history of Earth: The pregeologic period

            The earliest thin crust was probably unstable and so foundered and collapsed to depth. This in turn generated more gravitational energy, which enabled a thicker, more stable, longer-lasting crust to form. Once Earth’s interior (or its mantle) was hot and liquid, it would have been subjected to large-scale…

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        • oceans
          • The Bahamas
            In seawater: Chemical evolution of seawater

            …an early stage in which Earth’s crust was cooling and reacting with volatile or highly reactive gases of an acidic reducing nature to produce the oceans and an initial sedimentary rock mass. This stage lasted until about 3.5 billion years ago. The second stage was a period of transition to…

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        geomorphic processes

          research