100ml
6.5 Quarts
3 ounces
Had a blood test done and not much blood came out what do this mean please
Contd...(to avoid any confusion with numbers in my previous answer) Each unit of blood is a pint or 473ml. Therefore, 6 units the you may bleed with a severe pelvic fracture is about 3 litres, or about half your available blood.
Sponges are very interesting organisms. They are made of either spiny filaments called spicules or spongin, which is soft. To eat, they pull in water from around them and take out the nutrients, then send the water back out. That's why they have so many holes and why people use them for cleaning; they hold so much water. They don't have any organs, so the nutrients are carried to different parts of the body by amebocites, which are special cells that travel all around the sponge's body, depositing nutrients where they are needed.
the sponge can hold up to about 40 percent of the water from the bowl.
Yes. The larger the sponge the more mass it can hold in its pores. So if you have a very small sponge, it could only hold a small amount of liquid. If you have a large sponge, it could hold a lot more liquid. This is ALWAYS the case.
45ml of of water, but blood is thicker and it can hold 55ml of blood
you dont need cream you need blood
6.5 Quarts
750ml
2500ml
1 cup 1 c. it is 1 cup or 1 c.
It depends on the mass of the sponge.
an example of saturation is a wet sponge. if you fill the wet sponge up with water and place it on the counter and come back and 5 min. you may notice a puddle of water. this is because the sponge can only hold so much water, it has reached its saturation point.
A sponge has air bubbles.
Yes much more denser than sponge.