SOLUTION: A normal 10-cc specimen of human blood contains. 1.2g of hemoglobin. How much hemoglobin would 16cc of the same blood contain?
My attempted solution so far:
1.2g/10cc=x/16cc
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-> SOLUTION: A normal 10-cc specimen of human blood contains. 1.2g of hemoglobin. How much hemoglobin would 16cc of the same blood contain?
My attempted solution so far:
1.2g/10cc=x/16cc
-
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Question 892006: A normal 10-cc specimen of human blood contains. 1.2g of hemoglobin. How much hemoglobin would 16cc of the same blood contain?
My attempted solution so far:
1.2g/10cc=x/16cc
- 10cc + 1.2g * 16cc = 10cc*x – 10cc
1.2g * 6cc =x
You can put this solution on YOUR website! A normal 10-cc specimen of human blood contains. 1.2g of hemoglobin. How much hemoglobin would 16cc of the same blood contain?
My attempted solution so far:
1.2g/10cc=x/16cc
- 10cc + 1.2g * 16cc = 10cc*x – 10cc ****** ??? What is this about?
1.2g * 6cc =x
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A bigger sample would contain more hemoglobin, right?
It's 1.6 times as much blood, --> 1.6 times the hemoglobin.
1.6*1.2 = 1.92g
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My attempted solution so far:
1.2g/10cc=x/16cc
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Cross multiply
1.2*16 = 10x
10x = 19.2
x = 1.92
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