If I remember correctly, you count the rings in the shell.
clams die when they do not have the proper enviorment, salt water , algae to eat. a clam dies when its pearl is taken out .
The clam's shell has growth rings on them. All you have to do is count.Clams grow slightly bigger each year as they age. The put an extra bit on the edge of their shell to accommodate this and you can estimate a clams age by counting the ridges of this shell addition.
the tree's age, if it was lacking water and stuff.
it could tell u about what age it is or or how much water it gets each year
how can i tell the age of a dog
A seamonkey looks like a tiny fetus-like material. It lives in water, salt water only, and it lives up to 2 years of age
Fresh water lakes are lakes that were filled only by rain water. Salt water lakes were filled from when the glaciers of the last ice age melted, sea water were left in large pockets of land.
No, you can tell a horses age by it's teeth.
You can tell the age of the coyote by the size of the teeth on the coyote.
David E. Athons has written: 'Harvest distribution, age composition, and abundance of razor clams along the eastern beaches of Cook Inlet, 1992' -- subject(s): Statistics, Clams, Clam fisheries
No, the spots on the lady bug do not tell age.
It is virtually impossible to tell a canary's age. That is why they are banded at birth.