New Zealand has a population of 3,600,000 and approximately 60,000,000 sheep. The land area of New Zealand is 103,737 square miles (268,680 square kilometers), about the size of Colorado in USA, slightly larger than Victoria in Australia, less than half the size of Alberta in Canada.
About 150, if you go by volume: Pluto: 6,390,000,000 square kilometers Venus: 928,000,000,000 square kilometers If you wanted to keep all the Plutos spherical, so there would be gaps between them like marbles in a fishbowl, that's too much math for me to do right before supper.
British Columbia has approximately 25,725 kilometers of coastline, including all its islands and inlets.
The answer is 1931,37 square feet.
1 kilometre = 1000 metres. You now have all the information required to answer this and similar questions.
The Great Lakes cover approximately 94,250 square miles in total.
All of the continent is considered a desert, because of its low humidity and lack of precipitation.
First keep in mind that 20 square kilometers is not the same as 20 kilometers squared. Conversion units will have to be squared as well. Second, remember that there are exactly 2.54 centimeters in an inch, or 30.48 cm/ft. Third, to convert from kilometers to centimeters, just multiply by a hundred thousand, or 105. Put it all together and you get 20 x (105 / 30.48)2 = 215,278,208.334... square feet (or about 7.722 square miles).
The Antarctic has the greatest amount of desert at 14,000,000 square kilometers. Almost the entire continent is covered by desert. All the major deserts of Africa combined equal only 10,381,000 square kilometers.
The area of Tilney All Saints is 11.56 square kilometers.
No, it would be impossible to name all the cities in the US.
No. Mexico City just covers an area of nearly 7,854 square kilometers (3,032.4 sq mi), which is roughly half of New York City's. For comparison purposes, Central America has an area of 523,780 square kilometers (202,320 sq mi) so almost 67 cities the size of Mexico City would be needed to cover all Central America.
About 150, if you go by volume: Pluto: 6,390,000,000 square kilometers Venus: 928,000,000,000 square kilometers If you wanted to keep all the Plutos spherical, so there would be gaps between them like marbles in a fishbowl, that's too much math for me to do right before supper.
There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.There are many cosmopolitan cities all over Europe, so that part of Europe would have some.
200
in many cities yes, but not all of them most major cities or rich cities yep
The largest desert in Asia is the Arabian Desert at 2,300,000 square kilometers or 900,000 square miles. It is larger than the Gobi Desert which has only 1,300,000 square kilometers or 500,000 square miles. It is exceeded in size only by the Antarctic Desert and the Sahara. The Arabian Desert covers nearly all of the Arabian Peninsula.
It all depends on the size of the square.