Chapter 3 – Interior of the Earth | CBSE Notes
GEOGRAPHY  |  CLASS XI  |  NCERT
Book: Fundamentals of Physical Geography  |  Chapter 3

Interior of the Earth

⭐ Topper Level πŸ’¬ Easy Language πŸ“Œ Point-Wise πŸŒ‹ Mind Maps Included
🎯

1. Learning Objectives

After reading these notes, you will be able to:

1
Understand how scientists gather information about Earth’s interior through direct and indirect sources.
2
Explain earthquake waves β€” P-waves, S-waves, surface waves β€” and understand the shadow zone concept.
3
Know the three main layers of Earth β€” Crust, Mantle, and Core β€” with their key features and depths.
4
Understand the types of volcanoes and how they are classified based on eruption and form.
5
Identify various intrusive volcanic landforms β€” Batholith, Lacolith, Sill, Dyke and others.
πŸ”

2. Sources of Information about Earth’s Interior

Earth’s radius is about 6,378 km. No one can reach the centre of the earth. Most of our knowledge about the interior is based on estimates and inferences. Yet a part of information is obtained through direct observations and analysis of materials.
6,378 km
Radius of the Earth
12 km
Deepest drill at Kola, Arctic Ocean
3–4 km
Depth of Gold mines in South Africa
2 Projects
Deep Ocean Drilling & Integrated Ocean Drilling

βœ… A. Direct Sources

⛏️ Mining & Drilling

Surface rocks and rocks from mining areas give direct samples. Gold mines in South Africa go 3–4 km deep. Deepest drill at Kola (Arctic Ocean) reached 12 km. Two major projects: Deep Ocean Drilling and Integrated Ocean Drilling Project.

πŸŒ‹ Volcanic Eruptions

Molten magma thrown to the surface during eruptions is available for laboratory analysis. However, the exact depth of the magma source is difficult to confirm.

πŸ”¬ B. Indirect Sources

🌑️ Temperature & Pressure

Both temperature and pressure increase with depth. Density also increases. Scientists estimate values of these at different depths from known rates of change.

β˜„οΈ Meteors

Material in meteors is similar in composition to Earth’s interior. They are solid bodies developed from same/similar materials as our planet.

🌐 Gravity (g)

Gravity is greater near poles, less at equator. Difference between expected and recorded values = gravity anomaly β€” gives info about mass distribution in crust.

🧲 Magnetic Surveys

Provide information about distribution of magnetic materials in the crustal portion of the earth.

⭐ Most Important Indirect Source
Seismic activity (earthquake waves) is the most important source of information about the interior of the earth. The study of seismic waves provides a complete picture of the layered interior.
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3. Earthquakes and Seismic Waves

An earthquake is the shaking of the earth. It is a natural event caused by release of energy that generates waves travelling in all directions. The energy release occurs along a fault β€” a sharp break in crustal rocks. Rocks along a fault slide abruptly when friction is overcome β€” releasing energy.
Focus / Hypocentre
Point inside Earth where energy is released during earthquake
Epicentre
Point on surface directly above the focus β€” first to experience waves
Seismograph
Instrument that records earthquake waves reaching the surface
Lithosphere
All natural earthquakes occur here β€” up to 200 km from surface

πŸŒ€ Types of Earthquake Waves

Wave TypeFull NameSpeed & OrderMedium of TravelNature of Motion
P-wavesPrimary WavesFastest β€” arrive firstSolid, Liquid & GasParallel to wave direction; stretching & squeezing
S-wavesSecondary WavesSlower β€” arrive laterSolid onlyPerpendicular to wave direction; creates crests & troughs
Surface WavesL-wavesSlowest β€” last to arriveSurface onlyMost destructive; cause displacement of rocks & collapse of structures
πŸ’‘ Key Fact about S-waves
S-waves can only travel through solid materials. This property helped scientists understand that part of Earth’s interior (outer core) is in liquid state β€” because S-waves cannot pass through it.

πŸŒ‘ Shadow Zone

  • Areas where earthquake waves are not recorded by seismographs are called shadow zones.
  • Within 105Β° from epicentre β€” seismographs record both P and S-waves.
  • Beyond 145Β° from epicentre β€” only P-waves are recorded, not S-waves.
  • Zone between 105Β° and 145Β° from epicentre = shadow zone for both P and S-waves.
  • The entire zone beyond 105Β° does not receive S-waves at all.
  • S-wave shadow zone covers over 40% of Earth’s surface β€” much larger than P-wave shadow zone.
  • P-wave shadow zone = a band around Earth between 105Β° and 145Β° from epicentre.

⚑ Types of Earthquakes

πŸ”οΈ Tectonic Earthquakes

Most common type. Generated due to sliding of rocks along a fault plane.

πŸŒ‹ Volcanic Earthquakes

A special class of tectonic earthquake. Confined to areas of active volcanoes.

⛏️ Collapse Earthquakes

In areas of intense mining activity β€” roofs of underground mines collapse causing minor tremors.

πŸ’£ Explosion Earthquakes

Caused by explosion of chemical or nuclear devices. Man-made tremors.

πŸ’§ Reservoir Induced

Occur in areas of large reservoirs. Water pressure triggers ground tremors.

πŸ“ Measuring Earthquakes

Richter Scale
Measures magnitude (energy released). Range: 0–10. Earthquakes of 8+ are rare.
Mercalli Scale
Measures intensity (visible damage). Range: 1–12. Named after Italian seismologist Mercalli.

⚠️ Effects of Earthquakes

🚨 Immediate Hazardous Effects (12 Types)
Ground shaking  |  Differential ground settlement  |  Land and mud slides  |  Soil liquefaction  |  Ground lurching  |  Avalanches  |  Ground displacement  |  Floods from dam & levee failures  |  Fires  |  Structural collapse  |  Falling objects  |  Tsunami
πŸ“Œ About Tsunami
Tsunami occurs when epicentre is below oceanic waters and magnitude is sufficiently high. Tsunamis are waves generated by tremors, not an earthquake itself. Effects devastating when magnitude exceeds 5 on the Richter scale.
🌍

4. Structure of the Earth

🌍 Mind Map β€” Layers of the Earth
Earth’s Interior (6,378 km radius)
πŸ”οΈ Crust
Outermost solid layer
Oceanic 5 km | Continental 30 km
πŸ”₯ Mantle
Moho β†’ 2,900 km
Asthenosphere = magma source
βš™οΈ Outer Core
2,900–5,100 km
Liquid state
πŸ’Ž Inner Core
5,100–6,378 km
Solid state (NIFE)
🌊 Lithosphere
Crust + Upper Mantle
10–200 km thick
🌊 Asthenosphere
Upper mantle, up to 400 km
Source of magma

πŸ”οΈ A. The Crust

  • Outermost solid part of the earth. It is brittle in nature.
  • Oceanic Crust β€” thinner; mean thickness 5 km.
  • Continental Crust β€” thicker; mean thickness around 30 km.
  • Continental crust is thickest under major mountain systems β€” up to 70 km in the Himalayan region.

πŸ”₯ B. The Mantle

  • Extends from Moho’s discontinuity to 2,900 km depth.
  • Upper portion = Asthenosphere β€” the word means ‘weak’. Extends up to 400 km.
  • Asthenosphere is the main source of magma that finds its way to the surface during volcanic eruptions.
  • Lithosphere = Crust + Uppermost part of Mantle. Thickness: 10–200 km.
  • The lower mantle extends beyond the asthenosphere and is in solid state.

βš™οΈ C. The Core

  • Core–Mantle boundary is at 2,900 km depth.
  • Outer Core β€” in liquid state. (S-waves cannot pass through it.)
  • Inner Core β€” in solid state.
  • Core is made of very heavy material β€” mainly Nickel (Ni) and Iron (Fe). Also called NIFE layer.
LayerDepthStateKey Feature
Crust0–100 kmSolid (Brittle)Oceanic = 5 km; Continental = 30 km; Himalayan = 70 km
AsthenosphereUp to 400 kmSemi-solid (Weak)Main source of magma; ‘astheno’ means weak
MantleMoho – 2,900 kmSolid (lower part)Moho’s discontinuity separates it from crust
Outer Core2,900–5,100 kmLiquidS-waves cannot pass β€” proof of liquid state
Inner Core5,100–6,378 kmSolidNickel + Iron (NIFE); heaviest layer
πŸŒ‹

5. Volcanoes and Volcanic Landforms

A volcano is a place where gases, ashes and/or molten rock material (lava) escape to the ground. Material in the upper mantle = Magma. Once it moves towards the crust or reaches the surface = Lava. A volcano currently releasing or having released material in recent past = Active Volcano.
πŸ“Œ Magma vs Lava
Magma = molten rock inside the earth (upper mantle/asthenosphere)  |  Lava = magma that has reached or is moving towards the surface  |  Volcanic material also includes: pyroclastic debris, volcanic bombs, ash, dust, nitrogen/sulphur compounds, chlorene, hydrogen, argon.

πŸŒ‹ A. Types of Volcanoes

πŸ›‘οΈ Shield Volcanoes

Largest volcanoes (barring basalt flows). Made of basalt β€” very fluid lava. Not steep; low-explosivity. Lava comes as a fountain β†’ forms cinder cone. Famous example: Hawaiian volcanoes.

πŸ”οΈ Composite Volcanoes

Cooler and more viscous lava. Result in explosive eruptions. Large quantities of pyroclastic material and ash accumulate in layers near vents β€” hence ‘composite’.

πŸ’₯ Caldera

Most explosive volcanoes. Collapse on themselves during eruption β†’ form collapsed depressions called calderas. Magma chamber is huge and in close vicinity.

🌊 Flood Basalt Provinces

Outpour highly fluid lava flowing long distances. Flows can be 50 m+ thick. Deccan Traps (Maharashtra Plateau) β€” India’s major example.

🌊 Mid-Ocean Ridge Volcanoes

Occur in oceanic areas. Mid-ocean ridges more than 70,000 km long. The central portion experiences frequent eruptions.

πŸͺ¨ B. Intrusive Volcanic Landforms

When lava cools inside the crustal portion (not reaching surface), it forms plutonic rocks. These forms are called intrusive forms. When lava cools at the surface = volcanic rocks.

πŸ—» Batholith

Large body of magma cooling at deeper depths forms large domes. Appear on surface only after denudation. Granitic bodies. Are the cooled portion of magma chambers. Cover large areas, several km deep.

πŸ”οΈ Lacolith

Large dome-shaped intrusive body with a level base, connected by a pipe-like conduit. At deeper depths. Karnataka plateau domal granite hills are examples of lacoliths.

🍳 Lapolith

Lava develops into a saucer shape, concave to the sky. Forms when lava moves horizontally and rests in this saucer-like shape.

〰️ Phacolith

Wavy mass of intrusive rocks found at base of synclines or top of anticlines in folded igneous country. Has a definite conduit to magma chambers below.

πŸ“ Sill / Sheet

Near-horizontal bodies of intrusive igneous rock. Thin ones = sheets; thick horizontal deposits = sills.

🧱 Dyke

Lava solidifies in cracks/fissures almost perpendicular to the ground β†’ forms a wall-like structure. Most common in western Maharashtra. Feeders for the Deccan Traps eruptions.

πŸ“‹

Summary β€” Quick Revision

1

Earth’s radius = 6,378 km. Interior studied via direct (mining, drilling, volcanoes) and indirect (seismic waves, gravity anomaly, magnetism, meteors) sources.

2

Deepest drill: Kola, Arctic Ocean β€” 12 km. Major projects: Deep Ocean Drilling and Integrated Ocean Drilling Project.

3

P-waves (fastest, all media) β†’ S-waves (solid only, slower) β†’ Surface waves (slowest, most destructive). All recorded by seismograph.

4

Shadow zone: 105°–145Β° = no direct P or S-waves. Beyond 105Β° = no S-waves. S-wave shadow zone covers 40%+ of Earth’s surface.

5

Earthquake measured by Richter scale (magnitude, 0–10) and Mercalli scale (intensity, 1–12). Magnitude 8+ earthquakes are very rare.

6

Crust: oceanic = 5 km; continental = 30 km; Himalayan = 70 km. Mantle: Moho to 2,900 km. Core: outer (liquid) + inner (solid) = NIFE.

7

Asthenosphere (up to 400 km) = main source of magma. Lithosphere = Crust + Upper Mantle = 10–200 km. Moho’s discontinuity = crust–mantle boundary.

8

Volcanoes: Shield (basalt, low-explosive; Hawaiian), Composite (viscous, explosive), Caldera (most explosive), Flood Basalt (Deccan Traps), Mid-Ocean Ridge.

9

Intrusive forms (cooling inside crust): Batholith, Lacolith, Lapolith, Phacolith, Sill/Sheet, Dyke β€” all plutonic rocks.

10

Dykes = most common in western Maharashtra; feeders for Deccan Traps. Karnataka plateau domal hills = examples of Lacoliths/Batholiths.

πŸ“–

Important Terms to Remember

  • Seismograph: An instrument that records earthquake waves reaching the surface of the earth.
  • Focus / Hypocentre: The point inside the earth where energy is released during an earthquake.
  • Epicentre: The point on the surface directly above the focus β€” the first point to experience earthquake waves.
  • Fault: A sharp break in crustal rocks along which rocks tend to move in opposite directions, eventually releasing energy as an earthquake.
  • P-waves (Primary Waves): Fastest body waves that can travel through solids, liquids, and gases. They vibrate parallel to the wave direction, creating stretching and squeezing.
  • S-waves (Secondary Waves): Body waves that can travel only through solid materials. They vibrate perpendicular to wave direction, creating crests and troughs.
  • Surface Waves (L-waves): Slowest but most destructive earthquake waves that travel along the surface. Last to be recorded on seismograph. Cause structural collapse.
  • Shadow Zone: Areas on Earth’s surface where earthquake waves are not recorded. Zone between 105Β° and 145Β° from epicentre = shadow zone for both P and S-waves.
  • Gravity Anomaly: The difference between the expected and the recorded value of gravity (g) at a place. Gives information about mass distribution in Earth’s crust.
  • Richter Scale: Scale for measuring the magnitude (energy released) of an earthquake. Range: 0–10.
  • Mercalli Scale: Scale for measuring the intensity (visible damage) of an earthquake. Range: 1–12. Named after Italian seismologist Mercalli.
  • Moho’s Discontinuity: The boundary between the crust and the mantle of the earth.
  • Asthenosphere: The upper portion of the mantle (up to 400 km). The word means ‘weak’. It is the main source of magma that finds its way to the surface during volcanic eruptions.
  • Lithosphere: The crust and the uppermost part of the mantle together. Thickness ranges from 10–200 km.
  • NIFE Layer: The core of the earth, composed mainly of Nickel (Ni) and Iron (Fe).
  • Magma: Molten rock material present inside the earth (upper mantle/asthenosphere).
  • Lava: Magma that has started moving towards the crust or has reached the surface of the earth during a volcanic eruption.
  • Active Volcano: A volcano from which materials are currently being released or have been released in the recent past.
  • Caldera: Collapsed depressions formed when extremely explosive volcanoes collapse on themselves rather than building a tall structure.
  • Pyroclastic Material: Fragmented rock material (ash, dust, cinders, volcanic bombs) ejected explosively during volcanic eruptions.
  • Deccan Traps: A flood basalt province in India, covering most of Maharashtra plateau. Formed by flood basalt type volcanic eruptions.
  • Batholith: Large dome-shaped granitic intrusive body that cools deep inside the crust. The cooled portion of magma chambers; covers large areas.
  • Lacolith: Large dome-shaped intrusive body with a level base connected by a pipe-like conduit. Located at deeper depths. Karnataka plateau hills are examples.
  • Lapolith: A saucer-shaped (concave to the sky) intrusive igneous body formed when horizontally moving lava rests in a saucer-like form.
  • Phacolith: Wavy mass of intrusive rocks found at the base of synclines or top of anticlines in folded igneous country.
  • Sill / Sheet: Near-horizontal bodies of intrusive igneous rock. Thin deposits = sheets; thick horizontal deposits = sills.
  • Dyke: Wall-like intrusive structures formed when lava solidifies in vertical cracks/fissures perpendicular to the ground. Most common in western Maharashtra; feeders for Deccan Traps.
  • Tsunami: Giant ocean waves generated by earthquake tremors when the epicentre is below oceanic waters and the magnitude is sufficiently high.
  • Tectonic Earthquake: The most common type of earthquake, caused by sliding of rocks along a fault plane.

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