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Megalitre or megaliter (ML, Ml, or Mℓ), a unit of volume; Millilitre or milliliter (mL, ml, or mℓ), a unit of volume; Millilambert (mL), a non-SI unit of luminance; Richter magnitude scale (M L), used to measure earthquakes; Megalangmuir (ML), a unit of exposure of a surface to a given chemical species (convention is 1 ML=monolayer=1 Langmuir)
Many wet years from the 1970s to the 1990s filled both lakes to capacity, [19] [20] reaching a record high of 1,225 feet (373 m) in the summer of 1983. [20] In these decades prior to 2000, Glen Canyon Dam frequently released more than the required 8.23 million acre-feet (10,150,000 ML) to Lake Mead each year.
83,700 ML (1.84 × 10 10 imp ... kayak hire and children's playground. Lake Moogerah Caravan Park is located near many of the area's attractions and activities ...
1,165,238 ML (256,317 ... estimates there was a population of 800 in 2010 but many are swept out of the dam when the spillway is opened [23] [24] ...
44 ml (1.5 US fl oz) or 43 ml (1.5 imp fl oz) 71 ml (2.5 imp fl oz) In Canada, a "shot" may refer to an official "standard drink" of 1.5 imperial fluid ounces or 42.6 millilitres, [ 11 ] though all establishments serve a "standard drink" of 1 oz. [ 12 ] However, shot glasses available in Canada typically are manufactured according to US fluid ...
A teaspoon (5 ml) of neutron star material (5000 million tonnes) [117] 10 13: 1 × 10 13 kg Mass of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko [118] 4 × 10 13 kg Global annual human carbon dioxide emission [119] [120] 10 14: 1.05 × 10 14 kg Global net primary production – the total mass of carbon fixed in organic compounds by photosynthesis each ...
The facility treats 110 million U.S. gallons (420 megaliters) of wastewater per day, with a capacity of up to 167 million U.S. gal/d (630 ML/d), making it the largest tertiary treatment plant in the western United States. It serves 1.5 million residents and over 17,000 business facilities in eight cities.
Lambda (written λ, in lowercase) is a non-SI unit of volume equal to 10 −9 m 3, 1 cubic millimetre (mm 3) or 1 microlitre (μL).Introduced by the BIPM in 1880, [1] the lambda has been used in chemistry [2] and in law for measuring volume, but its use is not recommended.