No you would measure it in kilos, because its mass and volume are too great to measure in liters alone.
If you live East of the Atlantic Ocean (ex. North America), you would use miles. If you live West of the Atlantic Ocean (ex. Europe), you would use kilometers
Go do your homework.
Close, but actually 1.34,000,000,000,000,000,000. 1.34 Quintillion litres. {US and modern britain} Please see: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_liters_in_the_ocean
KILOMETER. it is a standard measurement. most measurements like area, perimeter, depth of ocean, speed of light, speed of sound all such things are measured in terms of kilometer. so it is the best way to measure distance as well
A tsunami is an ocean wave that is caused by an earthquake. It would occur after an earthquake.
pH is a measure of the acidity. concentration of salts would be molarity.
Salinity
salinity
It depends on what you mean by capacity: The amount of water in the ocean would probably be measured in millions of cubic kilometres. The amount of a chemical substance it can dissolve might be in tons or kilotons - though the amount that can be absorbed safely will be very much smaller - possible only kilograms.
Cubic kilometres.
In science, volume is always measured with liters.
A thermometer is sufficient.
millgram
A thermometer is sufficient.
Liters are a measurement for the volume of a liquid; kilograms are a measurement for weight. Please reask your question. How many liters of fresh water equels 1.9 kilograms? How many liters of mercury, or sea water? Sea water from the Pacific Ocean or the Dead Sea? Now really... please be more specific. ;-)
Volume of pacific ocean is 1.4*10^20
The amount of water in a tsunami can vary greatly depending on the size and strength of the wave, but in general, a tsunami can contain millions of liters of water as it travels across the ocean and crashes onto land.