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Real-Life Math

You are an ornithologist. You have been working in the field collecting data about owls. You have just arrived back at the office to go over your findings.

"Ornithologists use statistics for analyzing data they have collected out in the field," says Ron Rohrbaugh, an ornithologist. "For example, you might use the figures to determine differences in a survey of bird populations."

Now that you are back in the lab, you are sorting through your data and your scrapbooks, as well as the photographs you took of the owls.

You have a photograph of the owl showing the bird to be 2 inches long. If the bird in the photograph is 1/8 the size of the actual owl, how many inches tall is the actual owl? How many feet is this?

A colleague at the office is putting together statistical information about the penguin. He has a sketch of a penguin that is 1 inch tall. If this drawing is 1/36 of the actual size, how many inches tall is the actual penguin? How many feet is this?

Hint: 12 inches = 1 foot

"We use numbers to analyze all kinds of data that we bring back to the lab," says Rohrbaugh.

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