Ask Question
9 January, 03:21

To estimate the size of alarge crowd, suppose 6 students could comfortably occupy a 5 feet by 5 feet squar use this value to estimate the size of the crowd thays is 10 feet deep on both sides of the street standing along 1 mile section of a parade

+5
Answers (1)
  1. 9 January, 06:33
    0
    About 25,344 people are in this crowd for the parade using the calculations it told me to use. So now that we have our answer lets break this down for you:

    We have a width of 20ft (10ft for each side of the street) and We have 1 mile for our length which is 5,280ft. So now that we know these pieces of information now we can do our math below:

    20 x 5,280 = 105600

    105,600/25 = 4,224

    4,224 x 6 = 12,344 people

    Now that I have shown the math that I did let me explain what I just did. First off I got the area for the whole area of where the people were. Then I took that value and checked to see how many 25ft squared lots there were in that which there was 4,224 of them. And for every 25ft squared lot there are about 6 people so i multiplied 4,224 by 6 which gave me about 25,334 people standing in that area for the parade.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “To estimate the size of alarge crowd, suppose 6 students could comfortably occupy a 5 feet by 5 feet squar use this value to estimate the ...” in 📘 Advanced Placement (AP) if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers