It depends on the size of your body, blood pressure, fat, cholesterol, and many other factors. But the average adult human heart pumps a volume of from 7000 to 8000 liters every day. (This is roughly 1850 to 2100 gallons/day)
This is a rate between 4.9 liters/minute for a female adult and 5.6 liters/minute for a male adult.
The heart pumps about 5-6 quarts of blood throughout the body each minute.
At rest, the heart pumps about 5-6 quarts of blood per minute. This is known as the cardiac output, which can be calculated by multiplying the heart rate by the stroke volume.
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in a six year old boy the heart pumps 60-70 times in a minute.
The heart pumps, on average, 2.4 ounces per beat, averaging 5 liters per minute.
A giraffe, they, and their hearts, are many times larger than a human and a human heart
The human heart pumps about 10,000 quarts of blood per day. Depending on the size and weight.
The human body pumps about 2,000 gallons (approximately 7,570 liters) of blood per day. This equates to around 1,900-2,000 gallons of blood for an average adult human.
Five US quarts per minute is 283.9 liters per hour.
10 US quarts per minute is 150 US gallons per hour.
On average there are 5 L (approximately 5.28 quarts) of blood in the human body. At rest the heart pumps about 6,800 L of blood per day through about 96,500 Km of blood vessels. That equates to the heart pumping approximately 7,185 quarts of blood throughout the body per day.
Because they're the same. Every time the heart beats it pushes an amount of blood around the body, and that push is what you can feel in the wrists, by the throat or where you prefer to monitor the pulse.