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about three football fields are gone every second, you can do the maths.
Yes, it is estimated that an area of rainforest equivalent to a football pitch is destroyed every second due to deforestation caused by human activities such as logging, agriculture, and mining. This rapid rate of destruction is contributing to the loss of biodiversity and exacerbating climate change.
There are about 70 football fields' worth of trees cut down every minute, so in a day, roughly 100,800 football fields of trees are cut down.
the answer is about 135000 every minute but it is not exact. people stop cuting down the trees!I think it mightbe...............deforesttaion has now been stoped in the arizonian area of the tropical forest but in other parts i am not sure blah blah blah you improve this answer
Every junior high school, high school, and college that plays interscholastic football has their own football field. That would put the number of football fields in America up into the thousands, probably the tens of thousands.
LSU is the only one
Oh, dude, a mole is like a huge number, right? It's 6.022 x 10^23. And a football field is like, what, 100 meters long? So, if you divide the area of the Moon by the area of a football field, you'd need like a gazillion Moons to cover every square meter with football fields. But who's counting, right?
Approximately 40 football fields worth of forest are lost every minute globally, which equates to around 1.3 acres per second. This rapid deforestation is primarily driven by activities such as logging, agriculture expansion, and infrastructure development. The loss of forests has significant environmental impacts, including habitat destruction, loss of biodiversity, and contribution to climate change.
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) found that tropical deforestation rates increased 8.5 percent from 2000-2005 when compared with the 1990s.All round the world tropical rainforests lost 10,240,000 hectares (25 million acres) every year between 1990 and 2005.That's:10,240,000 hectares (25,000,000 acres) in one year. Or197,000 ha (481,000 acres) in one week. Or28,000 ha (69,000 acres) in one day. Or1172 ha (2861 acres) in one hour. Or19.5 ha (48 acres) every minute.0.33 ha (0.8 acres) every second.That's about 36 football fields of rainforest lost every minute.An American Football field measures 0.53 ha (1.32 acres).Countries annually losing the most rainforest 1990 and 2005:Brazil: 2,974,867 ha (7,351,000 acres) per yearIndonesia: 1,447,800 ha (3,577,000 acres)Papua New Guinea: 266,600 ha (660,000 acres)Bolivia: 135,200 ha (334,000 acres)Peru: 123,000 ha (304,000 acres)More information at the link below.
To replace the millions of somatic cells that are destroyed every second.
170 acres per second in the world
On average, about 2.4 million red blood cells are destroyed per second in the body. This amounts to approximately 172.8 million red blood cells destroyed every hour. White blood cells have a shorter lifespan and are continually being produced and destroyed. The precise number can vary depending on individual health and circumstances.