In Ancient Roman measurement, the acetabulum was a measure of volume (fluid and dry) equivalent to the Greek Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ὀξύβαφον (oxybaphon). It was one-fourth of the hemina and therefore one-eighth of the sextarius. It contained the weight in water of fifteen Attic drachmae.
Used with some frequency by Pliny the Elder, in a 1952 translation the unit was judged to be equivalent to .[1] However, other sources estimate a higher value of perhaps (see Ancient Roman units of measurement).