same as today all different sizes
firstly it is spelled "THROW" secondly barrels
That depends what the barrels are of and how much the individual barrels weigh.
Exxon mobile Here are some large companies that do not import Middle Eastern oil: Sunoco.....................0 barrels Conoco(76)...............0 barrels Sinclair.....................0 barrels BP/Phillips.............. 0 barrels Hess.........................0 barrels ARC0........................0 barrels Maverick..................0 barrels Flying J....................0 barrels Valero.......................0 barrels Murphy Oil USA*.....0 barrels *Sold at WalMART > , gas is from South Arkansas and fully USA owned and produced.
In the early 1860's, when oil production began, there was no standard container for oil, so oil and petroleum products were stored and transported in barrels of all different shapes and sizes (beer barrels, fish barrels, molasses barrels, turpentine barrels, etc.). By the early 1870's, the 42-gallon barrel had been adopted as the standard for oil trade. This was 2 gallons per barrel more than the 40-gallon standard used by many other industries at the time. The extra 2 gallons was to allow for evaporation and leaking during tranport (most barrels were made of wood). Standard Oil began manufacturing 42 gallon barrels that were blue to be used for transporting petroleum. The use of a blue barrel, abbreviated "bbl," guaranteed a buyer that this was a 42-gallon barrel.found this on seekingalpha.com
250 barrels
453,942 barrels.
Yes, the barrels are rifled.
No, you do not have to show horses in barrels.
they got 36 barrels of gunpowder into the houses of parliament by a boat they put all the barrels on a boat.
1. Russia (9.5million barrels daily) 2. Saudi Arabia (8.3million barrels daily) 3. USA (5.4million barrels daily) 4. Iran (4million barrels daily) 5. China (3.8million barrels daily)
60,000 barrels of oil = 2,520,000 gallons.