14,500 grains freerice.com
According to freerice.com, if rice is a staple part of your diet, then you need 18,400 grains of rice.
One scruple is 20 grains.
There are about 49 grains of rice in a gram.
Sand has one syllable.
1 cup = 8 ounces 1 ounce = 0.12 cup
There are a lot of sand grains in the world.
I have seen that Each grain of sand weights 0.0027 grams One ton is 907,185 grams, That is 335,994,400 grains of sand per ton and there are (aproximately) 700,500,000,000,000,000,000 grains of sand on earth (seven quintillion five quadrillion) from what I could found on the internet, but I don't know for the deserts only <><><> Not all deserts have sand- many are rocky. No one has measured the sand in all the deserts, so the weight is not known.
The sand will heat up faster.
what counts as an ounce equivalent of grains?1 slice of bread,1 cup of cereal or cup of cooked rice
No. Sand usually consists of more than one mineral, plus there are the spaces between the grains that are usually filled with air or water.
An ant "pack" is called a colony, but there could be thousands of ants in one colony. To count ants in a colony is like counting grains of sand in a sandbox.
One scruple is 20 grains.
I believe It changes the affect on the earth's surface, for an example: Dry sand grains are bound mainly by friction with one another. Small amounts of water increase the cohesion among sand grains. Saturation reduces friction and causes the sand to flow.
Yes, it would be.
How many ounces of rice you need per person will depend on the appetite of the people you are serving, and what else is being served. Generally 1/2 cup of rice per person is good. That is four ounces of rice.
It depends on the kind of sand you're talking about.There are five different types of sand, ranging from very fine to very course. Let's take the middle type of sand, which is medium sand.A grain of medium sand is between 1/50 of an inch and 1/100 of an inch. If you take the middle number between that range (~1/67), then we can estimate that a square inch of sand would have approximately 4500 grains of sand (67 squared is 4,489). This assumes a completely flat layer of sand one grain deep.A cubic inch of such sand would have just over 300,000 grains of sand.Obviously this number will vary based on the type of sand you're working with and can only be used for estimation purposes.IMPROVEMENT:Hmmm, first of all, the "middle number" would seem to be 1/75, not 1/67. Let's take 1/75.Second, the packing could be much denser than what the computation above seems to assume. With a denser packing of the grains of sand, a computation shows a shade less than 600,000 grains of 1/75" sand in a cubic inch.