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Math 10C CH 1 Measurement EXTRA PRACTICE 2012

This document provides practice problems for calculating the surface areas and volumes of various geometric shapes like pyramids, cones, spheres, cylinders, cubes, prisms and composite shapes. There are multiple choice and short answer questions asking students to determine properties of these shapes given dimensions. An answer key is provided with the calculated surface areas and volumes for each problem.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
955 views

Math 10C CH 1 Measurement EXTRA PRACTICE 2012

This document provides practice problems for calculating the surface areas and volumes of various geometric shapes like pyramids, cones, spheres, cylinders, cubes, prisms and composite shapes. There are multiple choice and short answer questions asking students to determine properties of these shapes given dimensions. An answer key is provided with the calculated surface areas and volumes for each problem.

Uploaded by

David Vu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Math 10 Common – Ch 1 – Measurement – EXTRA PRACTICE Name:_________________

Right Pyramids and Cones

1. Determine the surface area and volume of the following right cones and pyramids.

a.

5m

3m

b.
*note: This is a right square pyramid.

2. A right rectangular pyramid has base dimensions 8 ft. by 6 ft. and a height of 12 ft. Calculate the surface
area of the pyramid to the nearest square foot.

1
3. A right pyramid has a square base with side length 12 m and a height of 7 m. Calculate the surface area
of the pyramid to the nearest square metre.

4. The surface area of a right cone is 400.2 m2. The radius of the cone is 6.0 m. Determine the height of the
cone to the nearest metre.

Spheres and Hemispheres

1. Determine the surface area and volume of the following sphere:

19 cm

2. A solid hemisphere has radius 7 ft. Determine the surface area of the hemisphere to the nearest square
foot.

2
3. A sphere has a surface area of 10.1 m2. What is the radius of the sphere to the nearest tenth of a metre?

Cylinders, Cubes and Prisms

Find the surface area and volume of the following shapes.

a) b)
5 cm
5m

8 cm

6 cm 2m

7 cm
c)

6 cm

10 cm

4 cm
5 cm

3
1. The Grampbell’s soup company needs to make labels for their soup cans. If their cans have a
circumference of 25 cm and a height of 10 cm, calculate the following…

a. What is the radius of the soup can?

b. Using your rounded answer from part a, calculate the surface area of the soup can label.

c. If it costs $0.00045/cm2 to print the soup can labels, how much will it cost to make 950 labels?
Use your rounded answer from part c.

Composite Shapes

1. Calculate the surface area and volume of the following 3-D composite shape.

3 ft.
|

15 ft.

12 ft.
12 ft.

4
2. A right cylinder has a hemisphere removed from the top. Determine the volume of the object, to the nearest cubic
inch.

19 in.

7 in.

3. A right square pyramid with a height of 5.8 m and side length of 2.6 m is completely filled with water. If the
water is allowed to drip from the pyramid into a rectangular prism with a length of 3 m and a width of 2 m, what
will height will the water reach? Assume the entire volume of water is transferred into the rectangular prism.

ANSWER KEY
Right Pyramids and Cones 1. a. SA = 83.2 m2 , V = 47.1 m3 b. SA = 71.6 cm2 , V = 35.4 cm3
2. SA = 223 ft2 3. SA = 365 m2 4. h = 14 m
Spheres and Hemispheres 1. SA = 1134 cm2 , V = 3591 cm3 2. SA = 462 ft2 3. r = 0.9 m
Cylinders, Cubes and Prisms 1. a) SA = 236 cm3, V = 240 cm3 b) SA = 37.7 m2, V = 15.7 m3 c) SA = 285 cm2, V = 275 cm3
2. a) r = 4.0 cm b) 251.3 cm2 c) $107.43
Composite Shapes 1. SA = 1025 ft2, V = 2304 ft3 2. V = 641 in3 3. Height of water = 2.2 m

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