It's a sequence of 2x2=4, 4x3=12,12x4=48,so then 48x5=240. The answer is 240 hamsters.
300 years is three centuries. 100 years is one century.
.3 is the same as three tenths. Three tenths of one million is three hundred thousand years.
1.95 years.
Two years.
Well, darling, one third of three years is one year. It's simple math, honey. Just divide three by three and you get one. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
The boy starts with 2 hamsters, and it appears that the number of hamsters quadruples each year. After one year, he has 4 (2 x 2), after two years, he has 12 (4 x 3), and after three years, he has 48 (12 x 4). Assuming the pattern continues, after four years, he would have 48 x 4 = 192 hamsters.
The number of hamsters appears to be growing exponentially. After one year, he had 4 hamsters (2 new ones), after two years he had 12 (4 from the previous year plus 8 new ones), and after three years he had 48 (12 from the previous year plus 36 new ones). Following this pattern, after four years he would have 48 times 4, resulting in 192 hamsters.
After four years, the boy would have 144 hamsters. The pattern follows a multiplication sequence: 2 x 2 = 4, 4 x 3 = 12, 12 x 4 = 48, and 48 x 3 = 144.
hamsters can only live for three years so they die when they are 3 years old
Actually, black bear and teddy bear hamsters are the same. They each live about three years.
Hamsters and gerbils generally live for around 2 years, but have been known to live for three or four
A few years back I owned three Chinese Dwarf Hamsters, but there are different types of dwarf hamsters, e.g Russian Dwarf Hamsters. However, if you are thinking of getting dwarf hamsters, I don't recommend putting them in the same cage, as when I had my three, one of them ended up seriously injuring the other one.
The average hamster lives to be about three to four years old.
Winter White Hamsters typically live for about 1.5 to 2 years, although some may live slightly longer with proper care and a healthy environment.
Teddy bear hamsters live 3-5 years. Dwarf hamsters and Roborovski hamsters typically live 1-2 years with a maximum of 3 years.
Hamsters live from 3 up to 12 years.
Yes, but with the right care they can most likely live longer.