And as for your second problem, there's a couple ways to go about it.
1) Use the successive half-life data.
You know that half of whatever you started with will remain after the first half life (10 mins)
Half of THAT (or 1/4 the starting amount) will be present after the second half life (10 + 20 = 30 mins elapsed)
and Half of THAT (1/8 the starting amount) will be present after the third halflife (30 + 40 = 70 mins).
This gives you a good answer for 30 minutes...but other than that, we're stuck.
2) Figuring out the order of reaction (as you suggested).
Here, it may be easiest to make some data out of what you're given.
Let's say you start with a concentration of [c].
At t=0, [c] = [c]
0At t=10, [c] = (1/2)[c]
0At t=30, [c] = (1/4)[c]
0At t=70, [c] = (1/8)[c]
0From this, you should be able to get an expression for [c] based on [c]
0 and t....then you can plug 80 in for t, and see what you get
Hope that helps.
P.S. There are other ways to do the question too (so many choices!)...if someone else wants to share, feel free..maybe your method is even cleaner (The second one is my preferred one)