Such statistics are not correlated in isolation, there may be several factors which contribute to a fatal crash.
By far, the most usual are drinking and inexperience.
The probability of failure. Actually, the phrases used have very confusing connotations. When studying the risk of people being killed by lightning strikes, a "success" or the "desired outcome" is death caused by lightning. I somehow doubt that the person struck would consider it a desired outcome or a success!
80 percent of 45 people = 36 people.
On average, in the entire world about twenty eight thousand people will have the same birthday as one another. In a room full of people, there should be two people who have the same birthday.
bald people who wear diapers tend to cry more often than other people
People who weigh more do not normally have more blood volume. This is because what makes people overweight is fat not blood.
13,000
there is about 43443 people killed by car crashes each year there is about 43443 people killed by car crashes each year
pedestrians
pedestrians
Serious crashes.
Several thousand young people are killed in traffic crashes each year. The Partnership for Safe Driving reports that both speeding and distracted driving are much more serious problems for teens than drunken driving. According to official statistics collected by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, about seven out of every ten teens killed in traffic crashes had not been drinking at all.
1% end in crashes
10,000.
2986
3
On average, there are about 270 fatalities per year in the United States due to highway-rail crashes. These crashes occur at railroad crossings where a road intersects with railway tracks, and can be caused by factors such as driver error, obstructions, or faulty warning systems. Initiatives to improve safety at railroad crossings include the installation of barriers, warning lights, and education campaigns.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) 37,261 people died in traffic crashes in 2008 in the United States (latest figures available), including an estimated 11,773 people who died in alcohol-impaired driving crashes. Drunk driving fatalities accounted for 32% of all traffic deaths last year, that is, on average someone is killed in an alcohol-impaired driving crash every 45 minutes in the U.S. (Source: NHTSA/FARS, 2009)