-- Run the water supply to your house through a common utility water meter that reads
the aggregate flow in cubic feet.
-- Read the total on the meter at the beginning and ending of the appropriate
period of time under test.
-- Subtract the first reading from the second one to derive your water usage in
cubic feet during that period.
-- Multiply that number by 0.000007481 to calculate the same quantity in millions
of gallons.
Yes. Some rivers can hold millions maybe billions of gallons of water
errr 5 gallons in 1 million gallons = 5 parts per million
yes it does, most comets contain water usually D20 deuterium, (heavy water). Earth was bombarded for millions and millions of years in its early stages that is why we have water on our planet. simple!!!!!
5.11
You do the math: A gallon of water weighs a little over eight pounds: 8.34 lbs. One Ton = 2,000 lbs, 1 billion tons of water = 2,000 billion lb Divide 2 thousand billion pounds by 8.34 and there is your answer in gallons: 240 billion gallons
millions of gallons of water
Yes. Some rivers can hold millions maybe billions of gallons of water
millions of gallons
Over 8 millions gallons
35 gallons
errr 5 gallons in 1 million gallons = 5 parts per million
4.55
Common usage in USA and Canada is about 100 gallons each person, per day.
This pool holds up to 13,460 gallons of water. (this would fill it to the very top)
Rate Per 100 gallons (cgal)
Cave a hole and pour millions of gallons of water :)
yes it does, most comets contain water usually D20 deuterium, (heavy water). Earth was bombarded for millions and millions of years in its early stages that is why we have water on our planet. simple!!!!!