Density of loose soil is about 1200 kg/m3 1 cubic meter of soil may weigh more than this if compacted or moist.
soil weighs 1600 kg/ cubic meter
None, since a square is a two dimensional shape.
That depends on how thin you spread it. If it's a meter thick, it only covers one square meter. If it's a centimeter thick, it covers a hundred square meters.
You cannot use a measure of area to calculate its weight.You need a third dimension to first calculate the volume and then convert to weight by knowing the density of the soil.If you have a depth of one meter there is one cubic meter and soil has a density of about 1,3 so your cubic meter of soil weighs 1,3 tonnes.
It depends on the density of the soil. If the soil is compacted or stepped on or moist of dry the amount of soil in 1m x 1m x 1m is going to vary. The density of loose soil is about 1200 kg per m3
soil weighs 1600 kg/ cubic meter
The weight of 1 square inch of soil can be any positive number. It simply depends on how high the 1 square inch column of soil is.
The answer depends on where the soil is, and also on how deep you dig into the square metre area.
growing commercially? 6 qubic meters per 1000 sqm
None, since a square is a two dimensional shape.
depends on the soil structure and composition, probably around 600-800 Kg
That depends on how thin you spread it. If it's a meter thick, it only covers one square meter. If it's a centimeter thick, it covers a hundred square meters.
The volume of the one cubic meter soil equals 1x1x0.3 to give us 0.3 cubic metres.
depends on the soil composition. the more sand the heavier it is, the more silt the lighter it is < that doesn't help
=~1t. or 1000kg
It depends on what's in the soil and how big your hands are.
You cannot use a measure of area to calculate its weight.You need a third dimension to first calculate the volume and then convert to weight by knowing the density of the soil.If you have a depth of one meter there is one cubic meter and soil has a density of about 1,3 so your cubic meter of soil weighs 1,3 tonnes.