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It depends on the shape of the tank.
The answer will depend on the dimensions of the tank, not its shape!
Yes, a water tank can be in the shape of a cuboid. A cuboid is a three-dimensional shape with six rectangular faces, and a water tank can have this shape for practical reasons such as efficient storage and easy installation.
There is no standard shape for a tank, so the answer depends on the particular tank.
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That depends on -- the shape of the tank, -- the size and shape of the bottom if the bottom is flat.
What are the dimensions of the tank? (Insufficient information)
In order to calculate the capacity of the tank, you have to know its shape, and every dimension of that shape. For example, if it's the shape of a sphere, you need one number ... the radius of the sphere. If it's the shape of a cylinder, then you need both the radius of the end and the length of the cylinder ... two numbers. If the tank is the shape of a brick, then you need to know the length, width, and height ... three separate numbers. In your question, you haven't even told us the shape of the tank, so no answer is possible.
Such a tank probably has a cylindrical shape, so you can use the formula for a cylinder.
The number of miles you can drive is not dependent on the shape or material of the gas tank. The size of the tank matters, the larger the tank the farther you can drive.
The answer depends on whether or not the tank has a geometric shape. If it has a shape that can be broken up into simply geometric shapes, each with a volume formula, you can calculate the volume of each section and add them together. Obviously that will not work with a random shape. In that case, you can fill the tank to capacity and then empty it out into measuring jars or flasks. Use the volume of the jars to calculate the volume of the tank.
I'm no lawyer but... If a landlord may charge a pet deposit at all, then surely they can change it for an animal in a tank.