The question doesn't say it, so we'll assume that a "120 feet circle" means that
the diameter is 120-ft, i.e. the distance all the way across, through the center.
Area of the circle = pi R2 = 3,600 pi square feet.
If the dirt is one inch deep, then the volume is (3,600 pi) / 12 cubic feet = 34.907 cubic yards. (rounded)
The answer is: 34.907 cubic yards (rounded) for every inch the dirt is deep.
A yard (of dirt or concrete) is a volume of 1 cubic yard (1 yd)³, as the cubic is assumed in this context. Assuming a circle 7 feet across (diameter), then the radius is 3.5 feet = 1.16667 yards, and 8 inches = 0.2222 yards. So the volume of this is about 0.95 cubic yards. In concrete jargon it would be 0.95 yards.
The area of a circle with a diameter of 24 yards is: 452.4 square yards OR 4,071.6 square feet.
None because it's a hole but 6 cubic yards of dirt will fill it up.
19 feet!
10.92 feet
14 cubic feet = 0.518 cubic yards
A yard (of dirt or concrete) is a volume of 1 cubic yard (1 yd)³, as the cubic is assumed in this context. Assuming a circle 7 feet across (diameter), then the radius is 3.5 feet = 1.16667 yards, and 8 inches = 0.2222 yards. So the volume of this is about 0.95 cubic yards. In concrete jargon it would be 0.95 yards.
depends on whether the hole is a square or round. plus you pluralized 1 yard into "yards"
The area of a circle with a diameter of 24 yards is: 452.4 square yards OR 4,071.6 square feet.
None. It's a hole. 162 cubic feet of air. There is no dirt in a hole.
No, it is the other way round. 40 yards is 120 feet.
6 square yards, otherwise known as 54 square feet.
A yard is 3x3x3 = 27 cubic feet, so 7 yards is 7x27=189 cubic feet
A circle with a 60-foot circumference has an area of 286.48 square feet.
None because it's a hole but 6 cubic yards of dirt will fill it up.
19 feet!
3.75 feet