8266.8
There are approximately 35.3 cubic feet in one cubic meter of ice.
Ice has a density of 916,8 kilograms per cubic meter or 0.9128 grams per cubic centimeter. 20 cubic meters of ice weigh then 20 times 916,8 = 18336 kilograms = 18.336 tonnes.
Answer There are 1,000,000 or 106 cc's in a cubic metre. The density of ice is 0.9167 grams per cc (at 0 °C), so there will be 106 times 0.9167 grams of ice in a cubic metre of that ice, or there will be 0.9167 times 103 kilograms of ice in a cubic metre. That means that a cubic metre of ice will weigh 916.7 kilograms.
Ice weighs approximately 0.92 grams per cubic centimeter. To calculate the weight of 2 ice cubes, we would need to know their volume in cubic centimeters.
The weight of a cubic meter of salt can vary depending on the type of salt. On average, the weight of a cubic meter of salt is around 2,165 kilograms.
The density of ice is approximately 0.9167 grams per cubic centimeter, which is equivalent to 916.7 kilograms per cubic meter in standard units.
The density of ice is approximately 0.92 grams per cubic centimeter. Therefore, the weight of an ice cube would depend on its size and shape. A standard ice cube that is 2 centimeters on each side would weigh around 3.7 grams.
A 10' x 10' x 2' slab of ice would weigh approximately 11,200 pounds, assuming the density of ice is around 0.917 grams per cubic centimeter.
It depends how small it is crushed and how tightly it's packed. The smaller it's crushed and more tightly it's packed, the heavier it is as there is more ice and less space between the pieces of ice. In the most finely crushed and firmly packed volumes of the frozen stuff, the cubic foot of crushed ice will approach being a solid block. A cubic foot of water weighs about 62.4 pounds. A solid block of ice of the same volume weighs about 57.5 pounds. A cubic foot of "normal" crushed ice might weigh 35 to 45 pound range. And it could weigh more or less.
1 cubic yard of ice has a weight of 49421 pound-force.
Glacial ice has a density of about 850 kilograms per cubic meter. ref. http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/10ae.html