All of it
You are mixing volume (square yard) and area (length x width). How deep do you want the dirt? One foot deep you need about 80 square yards of dirt.
None, if it is a hole.
6 cubic square
Just multiply 1/2 foot x 12,000 square feet. The answer will be in cubic feet.
None Or it wouldn't be a hole.
You are mixing volume (square yard) and area (length x width). How deep do you want the dirt? One foot deep you need about 80 square yards of dirt.
none.
None, if it is a hole.
It would not weigh anything because there is no dirt inside of a hole.
600lb.
6 cubic square
There is no dirt in the hole, but if you want to know how much dirt was removed to create the hole, then:3 acres is an amount of area (you don't have 'square acres'). You could express this volume as acre-feet, but this term is usually used when referring to flooding (an acre of land flooded with 1 foot of water, for example). 1 acre = 43560 square feet, so 3 acres = 130680 square feet.(130680 square feet)*(200 feet) = 26136000 cubic feet {26.136 million cubic feet} In the dirt industry, the standard measurement is cubic yards {often referred to as just 'yards' of dirt}. There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, so this is equivalent to 968000 cubic yards.
There is no dirt. It's a hole.
Just multiply 1/2 foot x 12,000 square feet. The answer will be in cubic feet.
There is no dirt in a hole that is 3 feet deep and six inches in diameter.
None. Once you dig it, it is out of the hole, not in it.
None Or it wouldn't be a hole.