The Igneous, Sedimentary, and Metamorphic rocks.
A quart is a measurement of volume, like a pint or a gallon.Quartz, however, is a mineral.
The Igneous, Sedimentary, and Metamorphic rocks.
Submerge the object in a known volume of liquid within a container with graduation markings. Carefully turn the object to release and trapped gases from concavities. Measure the new volume of liquid with the object submerged and subtract the original volume. The difference is the volume of the irregularly shaped object. If the object is buoyant, choose a lower density liquid or hold the object beneath the surface with a rod or rods, noting the length of rod(s) submerged at the time of the second fluid measurement, then subtract the volume of rod submerged from the difference in the two fluid volumes.
This has to be a misspelling of something. Can you confirm the spelling, it sounds like the name of a mineral.
No. lbs is a weight (mass) volume is 3 dimensional measurement (space). One has nothing to do with the other. Like asking how does yellow sound...
There are various types of sounds, including natural sounds like birds chirping or waves crashing, artificial sounds like car horns or alarms, musical sounds like instruments playing, and vocal sounds like speech or singing. Sounds can also vary in pitch, volume, and duration, contributing to their overall characteristics.
Gallons are a measurement of volume, and grams are a measurement of mass (weight), so it would depend on what type of material you measuring.
Sounds more like a liquid than a solid
ist real oil, from the thickness and weight, it sounds like its for a diesel engine
It sounds like the circumference
a cm is a measurement of length, liter is a measurement of volume. this cannot be done. it's like asking how many gallons are in a foot.
Mineral deposits on the bottom of the tank and a failure is very near