It is not possible to answer the question sensibly.
Square feet are a measure of area, whereas weight is a property associated with volume. 10 sq feet of oak would probably weigh less than a feather if it were 1 micron thick. On the other hand, it would weigh a lot if it were 2 foot thick.
A box of Bruce natural oak, 3/4 inch thick, 2 1/4 inch wide, random lengths is euqal to roughly 20 square feet per box.
The question cannot be answered in any sensible way. The weight will depend on the volume of the oak, its density and the force of gravity acting on it. There is no information on the volume. The available information suggests that it is a 1 inch square - a 2-dimensional concept. Such an object cannot exist because no matter how thin, a square of oak MUST have a thickness and so is a three dimensional object - a cuboid (or square prism). The density of oak will vary from sample to sample - depending, for example, on how dry it is. Finally, the force of gravity varies by upto 5% on the surface of the earth. Up mountains and down deep mines the variation will be larger. And, taking things to an extreme, the force of gravity will be 0 at some points in space (Lagrange points and deep space) and infinitely large at others (inside black hole horizons). By suitable choice of location, an object could be made to weigh any amount you like.
The area of Oak Hammock Marsh is 20 square kilometers.
Kiln dried Red Oak at 6 percent moisture content weighs 4.444 ounces per cubic inch WRONG! 4.444 ounces per cubic inch is off by a factor of 10. It should be .4444 ounces per cubic inch
The oak branch represents (1) strength and (2) independence.
An oak log weighs about 200-1200 lbs.
That depends on the type of wood and the size of the logs. A Stere of oak can weigh twice what a stere of pine does
That depends on the type of wood. Oak for instance, weighs more then pine.
You mean trunk diameter: it could be up to 4 feet for white oak, 6ft red oak. You mean height: it could be up to 85 feet for white oak, 140 ft for red oak.
oak trees can be lots of different tons, e.g-1600 tons,15000 tons or more or less
A box of Bruce natural oak, 3/4 inch thick, 2 1/4 inch wide, random lengths is euqal to roughly 20 square feet per box.
The area of Oak Island is 566,559.0 square meters.
Oak flooring ranges from $ 1.99 to $ 5.48 per square foot. For more information, go to "www.homedepot.com" and search for oak flooring.
The question cannot be answered in any sensible way. The weight will depend on the volume of the oak, its density and the force of gravity acting on it. There is no information on the volume. The available information suggests that it is a 1 inch square - a 2-dimensional concept. Such an object cannot exist because no matter how thin, a square of oak MUST have a thickness and so is a three dimensional object - a cuboid (or square prism). The density of oak will vary from sample to sample - depending, for example, on how dry it is. Finally, the force of gravity varies by upto 5% on the surface of the earth. Up mountains and down deep mines the variation will be larger. And, taking things to an extreme, the force of gravity will be 0 at some points in space (Lagrange points and deep space) and infinitely large at others (inside black hole horizons). By suitable choice of location, an object could be made to weigh any amount you like.
The Scarlet Oak, Quercus coccinea, will grow to about 80 feet.
The area of Oak Point - Hollywood - is 100,000.0 square meters.
The area of Oak Hammock Marsh is 20 square kilometers.