I'm pretty sure you just have to find the volume of the hole. The answer might sound weird because you didn't say the type of measurement the hole is using but oh well. So if it's 71 by 71 and 6 deep, you just do 71x71x6. And that gives you....hmmm.....ummm.....got it! It gives you 30,246 dirt! I told you it sounds weird without the types of measurements, but it'll do. You would need 30,246 amount of dirt.
There is NO dirt, it is a hole! If you want to fill it with dirt, that is 4x6x12=288 cubic feet, weighing about 28,800 pounds
None because it's a hole but 6 cubic yards of dirt will fill it up.
10*13*3 = 390 cubic inches.
6,400 ft3
none there is no dirt in a hole
There is NO dirt, it is a hole! If you want to fill it with dirt, that is 4x6x12=288 cubic feet, weighing about 28,800 pounds
The question cannot be answered in a sensible way. The size of the hole is given in only two dimensions - in all likelihood, that means the area that the hole covers but not how deep it is. The amount of dirt required to fill the hole will depend on the depth of the hole as well.
None because it's a hole but 6 cubic yards of dirt will fill it up.
10-1/2 cubic yards
10*13*3 = 390 cubic inches.
A hole does not have dirt!
There is no dirt. It's a hole.
6,400 ft3
Theoretically, none. The amount of dirt excavated to create such a hole would be 1 cubic metre. However, excavated dirt (depending on the nature of the dirt) can increase in mass by up to a third the original size. That is why when you dig a big hole then fill it in (getting all the dirt back) the hole is raised on top not flat.
none there is no dirt in a hole
There's no dirt in it since it's a hole.
There is no dirt in a hole that is 3 feet deep and six inches in diameter.