10 Best Facts About The Asthenosphere For Kids

Jennie Hughes
Dec 12, 2023 By Jennie Hughes
Originally Published on Aug 05, 2020
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Age: 9-11
Read time: 5.0 Min

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Science can tell us so many incredible things about the way the Earth works, from how plants grow to why the sun rises, and even how earthquakes happen.

Most of us have heard of the Earth's core, and even the atmosphere, but what on earth is the asthenosphere? The asthenosphere is a layer of rock beneath the Earth's crust, where the Earth's solid crust and rocky upper mantle, or lithosphere, meet the lower layers of the mantle.

You might already know the Earth is made of layers, like an onion. On the outside is the crust, a thin layer of solid rock covering the Earth's surface. Along with the upper mantle, the crust forms a layer called the lithosphere.

Below the crust is the mantle. The mantle is a thick rocky layer almost 3000km deep that makes up most of the Earth's volume. Deep beneath the mantle, at the centre of the earth, is the core, made of the densest and heaviest materials on earth.

Between the lithosphere and the lower mantle lies the asthenosphere, an amazing place where rock flows like liquid and waves slow down to a crawl. Below, we've listed ten amazing asthenosphere facts to fascinate your friends and family.

Cross-section of a segment of the Earth's core, showing its inner layers.

© Nealey S., under a Creative Commons license.

What Is The Asthenosphere?

Before we can learn everything important about the asthenosphere, we need to know exactly what it is! The asthenosphere is a layer of rock that is found underneath the crust of the Earth.

The solid crust of the Earth and its rocky upper mantle (also known as the lithosphere) meet the lower layers of the mantle at the asthenosphere, making it an important part of the structure of the Earth.

Ten Asthenosphere Facts To Rock Your World

You'll have to put on your scientist hat to get to the core of these intriguing asthenosphere facts.

1) The asthenosphere is a layer of semi-molten rock. The temperature is just below the melting point of rock, so it's too hot to be solid like the crust, but still too cool to be liquid.

It's also under a huge amount of pressure, so it has all kinds of strange properties. It can flow like a liquid, break like a solid and transmits seismic waves at different rates to the other layers. It may even be responsible for earthquakes and volcanoes!

2) The asthenosphere sits beneath the lithosphere (the solid outer layer that forms the Earth's surface), and forms part of the upper mantle. This can be anywhere between 100 km and 700 km beneath the Earth's surface.

Whether or not a bit of rock counts as part of the asthenosphere is decided by its temperature. To count as part of the asthenosphere, the rocks' temperature has to have reached at least 1300°C.

Onlookers watch as lava falls on the water after an eruption.

3) The asthenosphere was discovered and named by a British geologist (a scientist who studies rocks) called Joseph Barrell in 1914.  He divided the Earth into the lithosphere (the solid rocky bit on the outside), the asthenosphere and the centrosphere (the molten rock inside).

4) Although Joseph Barrell worked out that the asthenosphere must exist in 1914, we didn't prove it was there until 1960, when an enormous earthquake hit Chile.

The seismic waves created by the earthquake were so strong that scientists were able to measure them closely and prove that they moved differently through the asthenosphere than in other layers of the Earth.

5) The name asthenosphere comes from the Greek word asthenia, meaning weak. Barrell called it the asthenosphere because its materials are weak compared to the more solid rocks in the lithosphere.

6)The asthenosphere is the reason plate tectonics work. Tectonic plates are large pieces of rock that make up the surface of the earth, a bit like puzzle pieces. They float on top of the asthenosphere.

Because the asthenosphere is not completely solid, convection currents within it move each plate at a slightly different rate and direction. When a plate bumps into or slides along another plate, it causes shock waves, also called seismic waves. This movement is usually felt on the Earth's surface as an earthquake.

Diagram illustrating the movement of tectonic plates.

©domdomegg, under a Creative Commons license.

7) Scientists can measure how thick the asthenosphere is by measuring seismic waves. Yes, the same ones that cause earthquakes.

Because the rocks in the asthenosphere are half-liquid and half-solid, waves called s-waves travel through it more slowly than they do other layers. By measuring how fast s-waves move, scientists can tell how deep the asthenosphere goes at different points round the earth.

8) The asthenosphere is also one reason we have volcanoes. If one tectonic plate starts to move away from another as they float on the asthenosphere, the movement can lead to a gap in the earth's crust, where magma bubbles up from below.

This usually happens in the oceanic lithosphere (the bits of the lithosphere that are under the oceans). When one tectonic plate pulls away from another deep below the ocean, the cold seawater cools the magma to form new volcanic rocks on the seabed.

View of a volcano on the other side of a lake at sunset.

©Sidney Recato

9) The asthenosphere is closest to the surface of the earth under the oceans. This is because the rocks making up the lithosphere are thinner here, so there is less rock between the asthenosphere and the surface.

10) The place where the lithosphere meets the asthenosphere is called the LAB. We know it sounds like a science joke, but it really isn't. LAB stands for Lithosphere-Asthenosphere Boundary, and it means the place where the solid rocks of the lithosphere meet the semi-molten rocks of the asthenosphere.

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Written by Jennie Hughes

Bachelor of Arts specializing in Chinese and French, Postgraduate Certificate in Education

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Jennie HughesBachelor of Arts specializing in Chinese and French, Postgraduate Certificate in Education

Jennie, originally from Manchester, discovered her love for teaching and travel while working at a kindergarten in China. Since then, she has become an expert in both fields and mainly teaches KS2 children. Jennie also runs a tutoring and mindfulness company called 'Recreate-U', which aims to create comfortable, safe, and happy learning environments to help people reach their full educational potential. During her free time, she enjoys engaging in craft projects or relaxing with a good book and a hot cup of tea.

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