San Antonio Current: Mantle Art Space to Unveil Collaborative Exhibition Inspired by the #MeToo Movement
Mantle Art Space to Unveil Collaborative Exhibition Inspired by the #MeToo Movement
Seattle Magazine: Frame Your Art by Mail, Using the Mantle Art App
San Antonio Current: Artists Brittany Ham and Elise Thompson Investigate Nostalgia in ‘Fun Baggage’ at Mantle Art Space
Artists Brittany Ham and Elise Thompson Investigate Nostalgia in ‘Fun Baggage’ at Mantle Art Space
Earth's upper mantle is divided into two major rheological layers: the rigid lithospheric mantle (the uppermost mantle), and the more ductile asthenosphere, separated by the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary.
The mantle is the mostly solid bulk of Earth's interior. The mantle lies between Earth's dense, super-heated core and its thin outer layer, the crust. The mantle is about 2,900 kilometers (1,802 miles) thick, and makes up a whopping 84 percent of Earth’s total volume.
Thickest Layer: The mantle is the thickest layer of the Earth, accounting for about 84% of the Earth’s volume. It extends approximately 2,900 kilometers beneath the crust, which makes it nearly twice the thickness of the Earth’s outer and inner cores combined.
The Earth's mantle, a thick layer of semi-molten rock sandwiched between the crust and the core, constitutes the bulk of the planet's volume and mass. This dynamic zone drives key geological processes, including plate tectonics and volcanic activity.
The mantle is a layered part of the earth, which is located just beneath the crustal layer of the earth. The Earth’s crustal surface (lithosphere) rides atop the asthenosphere.
Beneath our cities, forests, oceans, and deserts lies a vast, restless engine of molten rock and shifting power. It is the Earth’s mantle—a thick, complex layer that quietly shapes the surface of our planet and the life that depends on it.