No where near 1 ton.
A cubic yard of stone weighs approximate 2,800 pounds. This translates to about 1.42 tons, although most contractors will round up the numbers.
The answer depends upon the material to which you are referring too. A cubic yard of compressed cotton is obviously going to weigh less than a cubic yard of steel.
The building was constructed in the early years of World War II in the space of only 16 months, and was completed on January 15, 1943 at a cost of roughly $83 million. Its construction managed the consolidation of 17 buildings belonging to the War Department, and required 5.5 million cubic yards of earth, 41,492 concrete piles, as well the dredging of 680,000 tons of sand and gravel into 435,000 cubic yards of concrete. The building was constructed in the early years of World War II in the space of only 16 months, and was completed on January 15, 1943 at a cost of roughly $83 million. Its construction managed the consolidation of 17 buildings belonging to the War Department, and required 5.5 million cubic yards of earth, 41,492 concrete piles, as well the dredging of 680,000 tons of sand and gravel into 435,000 cubic yards of concrete.
1 cubic metre of dry concrete gravel weighs 2.4 tonnes Ernie Dibb Perth West Australia
Stone can be measured in tons or yards. Actually yards refers to cubic yards. A cubic yard measures one yard by one yard by one yard (in feet, 3 x 3 x 3). When stone is in a pile, try to estimate the volume in cubic feet, then divide by 27 to get cubic yards.
there is about 1.25 yards to a ton,so 22.5 tons would be approx 18 yards
You don't. Cubic yards is volume while yards is distance.
16 tons of dry sand occupies approximately 320 cubic feet of volume.
Yards is a measurement of distance - Tons is a measurement of weight - the two are not interchangeable.
13,243.24 tons.
That depends upon the substance that makes up the 800 cubic yards: 800 cubic yards of hydrogen weights approx 47.86 short tons; whereas 800 cubic yards of mercury weighs approx 9124 short tons.
yes, it is. 40 tonnes converts to about 39 tons, or 78,000 pounds.
That depends on the exact size of the rocks, - however a good rule of thumb for river rock in general is about 1.4 -1.6 tons per cubic yard. -So 14 cubic yards would be approximately 20 tons.
There is insufficient information to answer the question. 120k cubic yards of helium with weight a lot less than the same volume of lead, for example. 120k cubic yards of spoils,
17 tons
40 Tons