millions of dollars.
a lot
Generally the pioneers using handcards did not carry much or any food in their carts. Carts were meant for personal belongings, while food for the whole company was carried in a wagon and rationed out equally. Extra food brought or gathered along the trail by individual families would have been stored on carts, but there was very little space for it. The exact amount of space would depend on the number of people sharing the cart and how much stuff they decided to bring.
They can bring as much as personal items they want but they need to take some precausions like not to bring sharp objects that would cause destruction or harm.
You would bring a 2 or 4 litre bottle of cold water.And you would bring clothes and as much food as you CAN.And of course your D.S or a book.
Astronauts typically bring about 3 to 4 liters of water per person for a week-long mission in space, which is recycled from their waste and used for drinking and food preparation. The International Space Station (ISS) has systems in place to purify wastewater, allowing for efficient reuse. Water is crucial for hydration and maintaining health in the microgravity environment of space.
It depends. If you mean a Meerkat inside a Space Station, then not much, just food and water, it same it would need in it's natural environment on Earth. If it's just floating in space, then a Jet Pack, lot's of food and water and a brain as clever as a clever human.
Space probes are not piloted. Probes are launched to places that are months or years away in travel time. A pilot would require too much food, air, and water.
Chinese people bring food offerings to the graves of their ancestors as a symbolic meal and as a mark of respect and love, much as Westerners bring flowers.
A food vacuole can take up much of the space on the inside of the cell. This is because it acts as storage for the cell.
No, you may not. Closed containers like that are forbidden, and they'd really prefer you purchased your food and drinks from them anyway. It's DIsney policy to stop this at the gate, but they'll typically hold it for you until you leave.
Space food has changed a lot in 50 years. The quality and the nutrition value has increased way to much.
Everything at Disneyland is very expensive, so I would bring way more than $300. But that depends on how big your party is (how much people come with you, for a group of people is considered a party)