Sinònims
Examples for "crust of earth"
Examples for "crust of earth"
1Another, as an immense crust of earth floating on the water.
2Another, as an immense crust of earth floating on water.
3Beneath the thin crust of earth, Rawhead smelt the sky.
4The spot they were led to was evidently a mere crust of earth covering fierce subterranean fires.
5I am told he would go through the crust of earth for the backbone of an idio-ilio-something-saurus.
1How thick do you suppose the crust of the earth is, anyway?
2The rocky outside of the ball is called the crust of the earth.
3What would be the consequences of breaking through the crust of the earth?
4The yet elastic and yielding crust of the earth obeyed the fluid forces beneath.
5We shall be reduced to gnaw the very crust of the earth for nutriment.
1Just how far down in the Earth's crust can animals survive?
2Tectonic plates are large masses of solid rock that float on the Earth's crust.
3They may have been washed down through cracks in the Earth's crust by ancient rainwater.
4The world's oldest water, which is locked deep within the Earth's crust, just got even older.
5The Earth's crust would strike most people as something to get geologists, rather than gourmets, salivating.
6He was convinced that one animal could survive deep down in the Earth's crust: a nematode worm.
7Regular aftershocks have already hit Japan as the Earth's crust continues to rupture along the Japan trench.
8The study suggests that microbes, buried deep in the Earth's crust, altered the ancient rocks' chemical makeup.
9This is where the Pacific plate of Earth's crust dives - or subducts - beneath the Australian plate.
10It all comes down to plate tectonics, where huge slabs of the Earth's crust drift about and collide.
11Primary gold forms when gold precipitates during chemical reactions between hot hydrothermal fluids and rocks in the Earth's crust.
12Metal oxides (MOs) are the most abundant materials in the Earth's crust and are ingredients in traditional ceramics.
13That's because Lake Turkana lies in a volcanic area, where tectonic activity can move Earth's crust and create new layers.
14The research, published this week in Nature Geoscience, challenges the common assumption that the strength of the Earth's crust is constant.
15Svensen's research suggests that a mega-eruption's ability to wipe out species will depend on exactly where it punches through Earth's crust.
16They are similar because they involve more rapid than normal movement between two pieces of the Earth's crust along a fault.
Translations for Earth's crust