there is Zero cubic meters of soil in the hole, after all if there was any soil in the hol eit wouldn't be hole, now would it??
To answer your question, you must also know the length of the hole, them multiply all of the measurements together to find the cubic space of the hole.
None, All the dirt has been removed from the hole.
18
If you dig a hole that is 3 square meters in area and 2 meters deep, the volume of the hole is 3 square meters multiplied by 2 meters, which equals 6 cubic meters. However, since the dirt is removed from the hole, there is no dirt in the hole itself. Therefore, the amount of dirt in your hole is zero.
To calculate the volume of dirt in the hole, you multiply the length, width, and depth together. Therefore, the volume of the hole would be 6 meters x 2 meters x 1 meter = 12 cubic meters. Thus, there are 12 cubic meters of dirt in the hole.
What is the answer for rounding 14389 to the nearest thousands
30 cubic meters
Not even close. The hole has a volume of 6 x 10 x 0.5 = 30 cubic meters.
About 2 hours if possible. All you have to do is double everything including the time limit. I disagree. A hole with dimensions of all 2 meters is 8 cubic meters. A whole with all dimensions 4 meters is 64 cubic meters. You aren't just doubling the hole. Yes, you are going twice as deep, but you are also making it a bigger hole. If it took you one hour to dig 8 cubic meters, how many hours will it take you to dig 64 cubic meters? That would be 8 hours.
Impossible to answer. I can tell you how much dirt was removed by multiplying 2 by 2 by 3 (12 cu. mt.)
This is probably a trick question: there is no dirt in a hole. However, the hole was originally filled in with 24 cubic feet of dirt.
A hole does not have dirt!
600mm into cubic meter