30 minutes
There are 24 hours in a day. The snail travels 80 metres in 20 hours. If you divide the distance traveled by the number of hours taken (80 ÷ 20), then you would know that the snail travels at a rate of 4 metres per hour. Multiply the rate by the number of hours in a day and you see that:4 x 24 =96 metres per day
The garden snail is the fastest land snail. It can travel at a speed of 0.03 miles per hour. Snails are gastropods that move by crawling on a single foot.
1 mile
11.7
18 minutes? i think. =]
A "snail year" is 1.52 miles. A snail moving at a consistant pace travels 11 inches per hour.
A "snail year" is 1.52 miles. A snail moving at a consistant pace travels 11 inches per hour.
There are 24 hours in a day. The snail travels 80 metres in 20 hours. If you divide the distance traveled by the number of hours taken (80 ÷ 20), then you would know that the snail travels at a rate of 4 metres per hour. Multiply the rate by the number of hours in a day and you see that:4 x 24 =96 metres per day
A Worm travels faster than a Snail.
1.26 inches per min. * 60 = 75.6 inches per hour.4.80 hours * 75.6 inches per hour = 362.88 inches traveled.362.88 inches / 12 = 30.24 feet traveled.
I once had a snail that lived a bit over 3 years!
Well, isn't that a happy little question! If the snail travels 0.03 miles in 1 hour, we can first find out how many miles it travels in 20 minutes by dividing 0.03 by 3 to get 0.01 miles in 20 minutes. Since there are 5,280 feet in a mile, the snail will travel 52.8 feet in 20 minutes. Remember, there are no mistakes, just happy little accidents!
A stopwatch or a measuring tape can be used to measure the speed of a snail. You would time how long it takes the snail to travel a specific distance, or measure the distance the snail travels in a set amount of time.
Light travels 31,536,000 seconds in a year, just like, let's say, a snail that never stops creeping. But light travels farther than a snail does in the same time. For example, in a year, light travels 9,454,254,955,000 kilometers (5,874,601,673,000 miles).
That works out to 2.17 inches per minute, which sounds like a fast land-snail or slug. Strange.
3.75 inches What is this your homework?
I think that a snail could travel 1 inc