STRUCTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERE 
The atmosphere in which flight is conducted  is an envelope of air that surrounds the earth and rests upon its  surface. It is as much a part of the earth as the seas or the land.  However, air differs from land and water inasmuch as it is a mixture of  gases. It has mass, weight, and indefinite shape.  
Air, like any other fluid, is able to flow  and change its shape when subjected to even minute pressures because of  the lack of strong molecular cohesion. For example, gas will completely  fill any container into which it is placed, expanding or contracting to  adjust its shape to the limits of the container.  
The atmosphere is composed of 78 percent nitrogen, 21  percent oxygen, and 1 percent other gases, such as argon or helium. As  some of these elements are heavier than others, there is a natural  tendency of these heavier elements, such as oxygen, to settle to the  surface of the earth, while the lighter elements are lifted up to the  region of higher altitude. This explains why most of the oxygen is  contained below 35,000 feet altitude. 
Because air has mass and weight, it is a body, and as  a body, it reacts to the scientific laws of bodies in the same manner  as other gaseous bodies. This body of air resting upon the surface of  the earth has weight and at sea level develops an average pressure of  14.7 pounds on each square inch  of surface, or 29.92 inches of mercury. But as its thickness is  limited, the higher the altitude, the less air there is above. For this  reason, the weight of the atmosphere at 18,000 feet is only one-half  what it is at sea level. 

 
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