atmosphere/hydrospherelithosphereasthenospheremantleouter coreinner core(you could divide these further, but the above are the main 6 layers)
The asthenosphere lies in, and is the upper ductile part of, the mantle. It is the layer directly underneath the lithosphere; the layer composed of the crust and uppermost rigid mantle.
The lower mantle is located in the middle layer of the Earth's interior, known as the mantle. The mantle is divided into two main regions: the upper mantle and the lower mantle. The lower mantle is situated beneath the upper mantle and above the outer core.
Yes. The mantle is composed of the plastic mantle, or the upper part, which is partially molten. The stiffer mantle is under it. it is not as molten
Temperature is about 2000 to 3000 degrees celsius maybe less.The mantle is hot but not the hottest layer.It is is the second layer of the Earth. The mantle is the thickest layer of the earth, it is the layer of the earth beneath the crust.Upper mantle and Lower mantle are the two parts of the mantle, The lower mantle is deeper and denser than the upper mantle .
50 cent
A piece of cardboard with Mickey mantles picture.
google ted williams/mickey mantle, that's the most famous yankee/redsox picture
www.psadna.com/
a LOT of money. use it wisely :)
Mickey who? Vernon? Hatcher? Mantle? Rivers?
Depends on who certified it. An Upper Deck Mantle photo has a market rate between $500 to $1000 depending on the quality of photo and clarity of autograph.
Yes. A Mickey Mantle picture taken with a Polaroid camera, and other personal snapshots are highly collectible. A "snap shot" of Mickey Mantle could sell from $40.-$200, Value will vary based on photo subject, and composition; what Mantle is doing, who he's with, in or out of uniform, or on or off the field. The ballpark Mantle is playing in with older ballparks that no longer exist selling higher. The quality of the photo, and size will also factor in. Photographs made from the original negative are also more valuable.
Mickey Mantle worked as Director of public relations for the Dallas Reserve Life Insurance Company. There were many promotional items from baseballs to cards. The 1973 "How To Hit" hit record came in a cardboard fold out manual that featured pictures, stats, and the blue 33 1/3 RPM record. See related links below for a picture of the folder, with the record. The picture is a little small, and I'll see if I can get a larger picture for you. I will also leave a link for more information and pictures of the Mickey Mantle Reserve Life Insurance baseball card, and Rawlings baseball.
No, but you can easily find one on Google images, Ebay or other baseball card related sites.
i have a picture mickey mantle in 1948 team whiz kids of baxter springs kansas champions jr cardinal league
atmosphere/hydrospherelithosphereasthenospheremantleouter coreinner core(you could divide these further, but the above are the main 6 layers)