How to use in-sentence of “crust”:
+ This may be convenient for single loaf production, but the complex blistered and slashed crust characteristics of oven-baked sourdough bread cannot be achieved in a bread making machine, as this usually requires the use of a baking stone in the oven and misting of the dough to produce steam.
+ The oldest oceanic basalt crust today is only about 200 million years.
+ They have a thick crust and deep roots that extend as much as several hundred kilometers into the Earth’s mantle.
+ The continental crust is mainly made of ArcheanArchaean, Proterozoic and some Palaeozoic granites and gneisses.
+ The source of the Siberian Traps basalt was, probably, a mantle plume at the base of the crust which erupted through the Siberian craton.
+ The Earth has an outer solid layer called the Crust crust, a highly viscous layer called the mantle, a liquid layer that is the outer part of the core, called the outer core, and a solid center called the inner core.
Example sentences of “crust”:
+ The Earth’s crust has 17 major, rigid tectonic plates.
+ Sometimes a crust forms on top of the mantle.
+ Maillet’s geological observations convinced him that the Earth could not have been created in an instant because the features of the crust indicate a slow development by natural processes.
+ At ridges in the middle of oceans, new oceanic crust is created.
+ Below the crust is the mantle.
+ They are made of chopped pork and pork jelly sealed in a hot water crust pastry, and are most of the time eaten cold.
+ The crust is made up of different types of rocks: igneous, Metamorphic rockmetamorphic, and sedimentary rocks.
+ It escapes from the Earth’s crust into the atmosphere.
+ Other volcanic mountains form over hot spots, pockets of magma beneath the crust which erupt onto Earth’s surface.
+ Vanadium is an element that is widely distributed in Earth’s crust as well as in seawater and groundwater reservoirs.
+ The Earth's crust has 17 major, rigid tectonic plates.
+ Sometimes a crust forms on top of the mantle.
+ Maillet's geological observations convinced him that the Earth could not have been created in an instant because the features of the crust indicate a slow development by natural processes.
+ Lava is magma, hot molten rock that flows through holes in the Earth’s crust and onto the surface.
+ To make this clear, seas around continents have continental crust beneath them.
+ Jean-Robert de Cavel is a French-American celebrity chef He was Chef de cuisine at The Maisonette from 1993-2002, Executive chef at Jean-Robert at Pigall’s from 2002-2009, and now works at Jean-Robert’s Table, Le Bar a Boeuf and French Crust Cafe.
+ Another is Iceland, which sits on top of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, where new Earth’s crust is formed.
+ The moho, properly called the Mohorovičić discontinuity, is the boundary between the Earth’s crust and the mantle.
+ Furthermore, ideal crust development requires loaves of shapes not achievable in a machine’s loaf tin.
+ We now know that the existence of a viscous fluid under a thin crust is a much greater factor than the discovery of radioactivity, which was the textbook explanation for many years.
More in-sentence examples of “crust”:
+ At Level Post Bay, the crust is more than one metre thick, and because of its flat surface it has been the site for various land speed record attempts.
+ The new crust then slowly moves away from the ridge.
+ Some people involved in the discipilne look at geodynamics, the Crust crusts, the motion of the geographical poles.
+ Fluorite naturally occurs on the earths’ crust in rocks, coal and clay.
+ An ophiolite is a section of the Earth’s oceanic crust and the underlying Earth’s mantleupper mantle that has been uplifted and exposed above sea level.
+ Earth’s mantle and crust formed about 100 million years after the formation of the planet, about 4.6 billion years ago.
+ The theory said that parts of the Earth’s crust move slowly on top of a liquid mantle of higher density.
+ Mid-ocean ridges are geologically active, with new magma constantly emerging onto the ocean floor and into the crust at and near rifts along the ridge axes.
+ They can also examine the crust in a seismic survey to try and find information about layers of rock, locate oil or gas fields and to get information about the internal structure of volcanos.
+ Such old continental crust and the mantle below it are less dense than other places in the Earth.
+ It has its own magma plumbing under the Earth that goes down under the Earths crust by 60 km.
+ Some of the earth’s crust gets pushed into Sichuan and southern China.
+ The lithosphere, above, includes the crust and the uppermost part of the mantle.
+ Some contain oceanic crust only.
+ It does include oceanic crust west to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and north to the Gakkel Ridge.
+ The Earth’s mantle is a layer of silicate rock between the crust and the outer core.
+ There is also a lizard, the Lake Eyre Dragon, Ctenophorus maculosus, that lives in the cool mud below the salt crust of the lake.
+ As the oceanic crust moves away from the ridge axis, the peridotite in the underlying mantle cools and becomes more rigid.
+ The oceanic crust is thinner, 5 km thick.
+ The physical geography of the province was caused by extension and thinning of the lithosphere, which is composed of crust and upper mantle.
+ They are large areas of flat topped rocks that have been lifted high above the crust by continental plates.
+ That means the Earth’s crust is made of rock.
+ Melted material from the mantle and crust moves up through the crust and collects in magma chambers.
+ It is thought that the green ophiolite rock was formed at the moho, That is, the junction between the bottom of the Earth’s crust and the top of the Earth’s mantle.
+ These are all thought to have originated from the crust of the asteroid 4 Vesta, their differences being due to different geologic histories of the parent rock.
+ At Level Post Bay, the crust is more than one metre thick, and because of its flat surface it has been the site for various land speed record attempts.
+ The new crust then slowly moves away from the ridge.
+ Some people involved in the discipilne look at geodynamics, the Crust crusts, the motion of the geographical poles.
+ A terrane is a fragment of Earth’s crustcrust from one tectonic plate stuck to crust lying on another plate.
+ In 2007 a team of scientists on board the RRS James Cook went to an area of the Atlantic seafloor where the mantle has no crust covering.
+ We can know the thickness of the Earth’s crust with Love waves.
+ At first the crust was very thin, and was probably changed often as the tectonic plates shifted around a lot more than they do now.
+ As it moves away from the ridge, the crust becomes cooler and denser, while the sediment may build on top of it.
+ It forms new crust as the plates move away from each other.
+ It includes much of the continent of Africa, as well as oceanic crust which lies between the continent and various surrounding ocean ridges.
+ The crust is of two different types.
+ Past episodes of melting and volcanism at the outer levels of the mantle have produced a very thin crust of crystallized melt products near the surface, where we live.
+ The crust similar to that of an English muffin and mostly cooked in an electric oven.
+ The crust and the upper mantle make up the lithosphere.
+ Many of them have ribbed or nodular surfaces, and sometimes they have a crust intersected by many cracks like the surface of a loaf of bread.
+ The Andes are the result of plate tectonics processes, caused by the subduction of oceanic crust beneath the South American continental plate.
+ The salt crust on the lake is not thick and can break like glass under a person’s weight.
+ The crust and the relatively rigid peridotite below it make up the oceanic lithosphere.
+ The plough breaks the upper crust of the soil so that air and sunlight enter into the soil.
+ The Antartic plate includes continental crust making up Antarctica and its continental shelf, along with oceanic crust beneath the seas surrounding of Antarctica.
+ He proposed in 1931 that the Earth’s mantle contained convection cells that dissipated radioactive heat and moved the crust at the surface.
+ He described the dynamic and petrologic evolution of Earth’s crust and mantle.
+ The geothermal energy of the Earth’s Crust crust comes 20% from the original formation of the planet, and 80% from the radioactive decay of minerals..
+ It has a pastry crust with or without a pastry top.
+ The continuous formation of new oceanic crust pushes the older crust away from the mid-ocean ridge.