I would go with (aragonite with bacteria in it). It is loaded with beneficial bacteria which will help you cycle your pool faster. For a tank I like to use 2-3 inches of substrate. For your pool i would go with that depth. To my knowledge it does not have to be replaced because the bacteria will cover any surface areas that are rough.
as a general rule 3-5 watts of intense light per gallon is a must.
How many gallons in your pool because I can figure out what your need. for example a 180 gallon tank would require 3 175 watt 5500k bulbs with 5-6 96 watt compact fluorescents, with this lighting all of your corals and other photosynthetic animals will thrive.
corals such as (mushroom coral, non-photosynthetic gorgonians, Tubestra corals, bubble coral, tree coral, brain coral)are corals that I do not work with but all of my texts still list them as photosynthetic stony corals that do not require feeding & are easy to propagate but rapidly deplete Ca levels in a system
There are many cycles, but the one which is universally known and for which evaporation is critical is the water cycle. The water cycle describe the process of water going from the air as rain, through land and water systems and then back into the air mostly through evaporation.
About 36,014 gallons.
20 gallons of water weighs 167 pounds.
800 pounds of water would be 95.8 US gallons.
616 x 7.48 =4607.68
5 to 7 gallons of water to run a dishwasher on a normal cycle.
It depends on the cycle. As little as 1.5 gallons to 10.5 gallons.
about 9.75 gallons of water or 40 liters per load day
225 gals
about 2.343201.0 gallons
It takes 5 to 7 gallons of water to run a normal cycle.
63
There are many cycles, but the one which is universally known and for which evaporation is critical is the water cycle. The water cycle describe the process of water going from the air as rain, through land and water systems and then back into the air mostly through evaporation.
Corn takes between one to two gallons per plant on a weekly basis. An acre of corn take 350,000 gallons of water over the 100 day growing cycle.
It uses as many as you run through it, but who would want to heat hot water?
264.172 gallons.
Billions of gallons (or more), if you are prepared to wait long enough.