Fill it up with water, dry the shell off and pour the water into some sort of measuring device? Or.. Since water weighs about 1kg/liter you could pour water into the shell and then weigh the water to know the volume..
fill each one with water a see which one holds the most
Length times width times height is how you would normally find the volume of a shape.
yes
If you want to find a volume of a regular shape, You need to multiply Length, Width, and High.
You can't. Volume is the space occupied by a substance or object. To find the volume from the mass, the density would have to be known. Density = Mass / Volume If you want to find any of the three, you need the other two.
fill each one with water a see which one holds the most
The scientific name for common seashells is "Gastropoda." This is a class of mollusks that includes a wide variety of species with shells. Additionally, within the Gastropoda class, there are many families and genera that further classify different types of seashells.
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They don't have them anymore. They are rare now, you would be lucky to find someone with one.
The anagram is "seashell" - with one less L, it would be leashes.
A seashell is formed of calcium carbonate, which is secreted by shellfish and clams. It is not unusual to find an ancient seashell far from any modern ocean or sea.
It is gone now.
Some kinds of crafts one can make with seashells are: seashell frames, seashell chimes, seashell angels, seashell collages, seashell lamps and seashell mosaics.
The hardest seashell to find might be the cowrie shell because they tend to be very well camouflaged. The outer surface of the shell is extremely hard and the walls are thick as well. The hardness of the seashell is related to its size and the thickness of its walls.
I don't really know, but from having had to catalogue many, many seashell collections I would say "light brown" is the most common seashell color, closely followed by off-white. Shades of blue would be the most rare, from my experience.
Length times width times height is how you would normally find the volume of a shape.
the volume of the encyclopedia where you can find the topic antennas is volume 9.