A normal red blood cell count is about 5,000,000 per uL.
There are 1,000 uL per ml and 5 ml per tsp so:
5x10^6 x 10^3 x5 = 25x10^9 or 25,000,000,000 or 25 trillion.
6,200,000,000,000 or 6.2 trillion red blood cells per liter of blood
A red blood cells does not have any chromosomes. Red blood cells do not have a nucleus so it is impossible for them to have chromosomes.
red blood cells. but there are also many white blood cells. not as many though.
hemophagia
One microliter of blood contains approximately 5 million red blood cells.
8 million red blood cells
Billions! :)
Red blood cells contain hemoglobin. These cells are also known as erythrocytes.
There are 500 white blood cells to every 1000 red blood cells (or you could say there is double the amount of red blood cells). The answer would be 200 red blood cells for every 100 white blood cells.
Red blood cells because that is what carries oxygen throughout the body
The basic components include red/white blood cells, platelets, and plasma.
red blood cells