A grade A burette (more accurate) or a graduated cylinder.
To measure a volume of liquid, laboratory instruments known as glassware are used. The commonly used glassware are burettes, pipettes, volumetric flasks and graduated cylinders.
The total volume of the solution is 225ml + 65ml = 290ml. The percentage of alcohol in the solution is (65ml / 290ml) x 100% = 22.4%.
That is 0.065 litre
65ml = 65cc
65Ml = 0.3 cup (US)
65mL equates to about 2.2 US fluid ounces.
15 drop per ml or 15 ggt according to National Healthcaregiver Association
The approximate blood volume of a 75-kg adult is around 5-6 liters. This can vary depending on factors such as gender, height, and muscle mass. The average adult has about 8% of their body weight as blood volume.
A horse has (Typically) 80 ml of blood per kg (hotblood breeds have 100ml per kg and coldblood breeds have 65ml per kg). Therefore and average 1,200 pound horse will have 12.3 gallons of blood. A horse must lose roughly 10% of it's blood to go into shock, which would be roughly 2 gallons of blood.
I have no idea what the density might be if the volume is 65 ml. If you will get the mass then it will be possible to determine the density. If the mass is 65g, the density is 1. If the mass is 130g, the density is 2. If the mass is 32.5 then the density is 0.5. However, without the mass, I have no idea.
65mL = 0.065L (Less than 1 Liter) The conversion factor is 1000mL per 1 Liter.
Approximately 5 liters of blood in the average sized adult male. The larger the male, the more circulating blood he will have. On average, for an adult male it is near 75mL/kg and for a women 65mL/kg, so that would make it 5625mL for a man and 4875mL for a women.