It is not possible to answer this question with even an approximation. Many of the people interned during the Holocaust starved to death due to lack of food. The quality and quantity of food was not recorded or, if recorded, was not accurate or truthful. Suffice it to say, the caloric intake of those held was grossly insufficient.
No. its not plus ur dail amount of calories.!
There were 20,000 concentration camps, ghettos and labor camps throughout Europe with the largest amount being in Germany. Not all of the camps and ghettos were designed or designated to be "murder camps". So they did not all have the same amount of deaths per month as you ask about. I have heard from historians who estimated that at the beginning of the incarceration of the Jews and undesirable people there were thousands who were killed each month or year. Towards the end of the war they guesstimate there were 70,000 deaths a month throughout Europe but that is not a solid figure. If you need the exact averages during certain years or months the United States Memorial Museum of the Holocaust could possibly supply you with those figures. See the link below.
The amount [of stuff] in an object or substance is its mass.
The term for "the amount of solute dissolved in a given volume of solution" is "concentration"
To measure concentration, you compare the amount of the solute to the total amount of the solution.
According to a box of Kellogg Cornflakes, the amount of calories needed by a child in a day is 6000 calories. It might be different for other people but that is the average amount for a child.
The amount of one material in a certain volume of another material?
42 calories in 100ml
The Concentration
they were fed only a small amount little bits of bread but it depends on the camp --------- the official amounts were between 100 and 200 calories per day, but they never received the amount that they were allocated, there were many greedy hands along the way
No you
Yes. Calories fuel the body.