The length of veins in the human body can range from 50,000 to 100,000 miles, depending on which anatomy textbook you're referencing (this also depends, of course, on the age of the body).
There are roughly 23.45 kilomeaters in one meter. It's in the Guiness Book of World Records.
There are 72,000 MAJOR VEINS in a regular human body.
THERE ARE 20 ARTERIES IN THE HUMAN BODY.
The veins are what transport key nutrients to the rest of the body's systems. Without the veins, the body systems would not function. For example, the veins have pathways to the brain which relies entirely on the many nutrients the blood provides it.
There are millions of veins present in human body, which are not accounted yet accurately. Every organ has veins running from it branching off into many more capillaries. Approximately the total length of the veins in the human body ranges from 60,000 - 100,000 miles including the capillaries.
two feet
the veins are blue.
The number of veins in the human body varies a lot from person to person and there are too many to count.
342
Pounds is weight, kilometres is distance. No equivalent possible.
100,000 light years = 9.4605284 × 1017kilometers
Veins can break in your body in many different forms. They can break when you are stressing out too much that you can't think of anything else. They can break when you are swollen up etc ......