it depend of the shape if box v = w x L x H
if cylinder = size of baise ( the circle x h ) =r ^2 x 3.14 x H
2007-09-10 17:13:48
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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1) Take the measurements of the depth of the water and length and width of the container, if the water is in a container, and multiply them all togethor. Call the sum either "square" inches, yards, centimeters etc, whatever is on the ruler you used.
2) Weigh the water and go to your dictionary or internet and look up a thing called a "weight to volume" conversion chart.
2007-09-10 17:09:13
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Volume is in units of cubic length, so you have to define the container you are using. For a cylindrical bottle of cross-sectional radius R and height H, the full volume is pi*R^2*H. Other shapes have other formulas.
2007-09-10 17:07:38
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answer #3
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answered by cattbarf 7
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55 km^3 EDIT: A *simple* experiment to prove the volume of ice vs the volume of water: get a graduated cylinder fill said graduated cylinder with water to a specific level add a piece of ice observe the new water level record the new water level allow ice to melt observe that the water level after the ice melts is identical to the recorded new water level. stop believing those who try to frighten you into believing that the earth will be flooded by melted ice.
2016-05-17 04:19:07
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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L x W x D for a square or rectangular container
3.1417 x R² x D for cylinder container
(L = length, W = width, D = depth, R = radius)
2007-09-10 17:09:53
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answer #5
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answered by jcruts13 1
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LENGTH X BREADTH X DEPTH X SIX AND A QUARTER.
2007-09-10 17:08:17
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answer #6
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answered by joe 6
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