Count per Liter

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Count (or number) per liter is used to measure number density in a variety of domains. Many scientific research questions require a means to measure the frequency or count of discrete entities in a given unit of volume. For instance, medical professionals often make measurements on the blood of patients, such as the Complete Blood Count using counts per liter units. Some measures of water quality use counts of micro-organisms per liter of water.[1] In archaeology, counts per liter are used to measure the number density of artifacts or ecofacts in archaeological deposits.[2]

References and notes

  1. Outi M Zacheus; Markku J Lehtola; Leena K Korhonen; Pertti J Martikainen (2001). "Soft deposits, the key site for microbial growth in drinking water distribution networks". Water Research 35 (7): 1757–1765. doi:10.1016/S0043-1354(00)00431-0. 
  2. Thomas E. Emerson; Kristin M. Hedman; Mary L. Simon. Marginal Horticulturalists or Maize Agriculturalists? Archaeobotanical, Paleopathological, and Isotopic Evidence Relating to Langford Tradition Maize Consumption. 30. Midwest Archaeological Conference, Inc.. pp. 67–118.