I seriously have no idea but maybe about six
According to the US Mint, the quarter dollar is 1.75mm thick.1.75mm x 1cm/10mm = 0.175cmSave0.175cm x 1in/2.54cm = 0.0689in1in/0.0689in = 14.5 quarters to make a stack 1 in highObviously you can't stack 14.5 quarters. 15 quarters makes a stack 1.03in high. 14 quarters make a stack 0.965in high.
169
s lot of it
A square foot can be divided into 4 quarters each quarter measuring 6 square inches.
10,000
A foot is 12*25.4 mm and a quarter is 1.75 mm thick so you will need 12*25.4/1.75 quarters = 174.2 of them.
According to the US Mint, the quarter dollar is 1.75mm thick.1.75mm x 1cm/10mm = 0.175cmSave0.175cm x 1in/2.54cm = 0.0689in1in/0.0689in = 14.5 quarters to make a stack 1 in highObviously you can't stack 14.5 quarters. 15 quarters makes a stack 1.03in high. 14 quarters make a stack 0.965in high.
169
s lot of it
A square foot can be divided into 4 quarters each quarter measuring 6 square inches.
1 US quarter has a thickness of 1.75 millimeters. A 1-inch stack of quarters would be about 15 quarters.
There are 4 quarters in a foot each having a length of 3 inches
There are 12 inches in one foot. Therefore, three quarters of a foot is equal to 3/4 x 12 = 9 inches.
400 feet
about 160- 190
870; a quarter has a thickness of about 0.07 inches, and 61 / 0.07 = 870.
It is estimated that recycling a 4-foot stack of newspapers can save around 12-24 trees. This number can vary based on factors such as the type of paper and the efficiency of the recycling process.