A prominent transition boundary separates the core from the mantle. Up to 200 kilometers (120 miles) thick, the boundary is marked by different densities and temperatures. It may represent the lower limit of mantle convection, where colder, higher‐density material such as subducted plates are reassimilated into the mantle. It may also be the upper limit for convection in the core, where hotter, lower‐density material rises from the center of the earth, cools, and sinks again.