Wiki User
β 11y agoThat would be a 1/16th quarter: 40 acres.
Wiki User
β 11y agoThe southeast quarter of a section is 160 acres, and the southeast quarter of that is 40 acres. So, the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of a section is 40 acres.
One section is equal to one square mile. In one square mile, there are 640 acres, therefore in one quarter of a section of land, there are 160 acres.
A quarter section is equivalent to 64 hectares. This is because one section is 640 acres and a quarter section is one-fourth of that area.
One quarter of land is equivalent to 40 acres, which is equal to 16.187 hectares.
A quarter section of land is 160 acres, and one acre is approximately 0.0015625 square miles. Therefore, a quarter section of land is about 0.25 square miles.
A section in a township typically consists of 640 acres.
1 section = 640 acres(north HALF) of (southeast QUARTER) = (1/2) x (1/4) = 1/8th section = 640/8 = 80 acres
Any quarter section is comprised of 160 acres.
You haven't said a 'quarter' of what. If it's a quarter section, then there are 160 acres in it.
160 acres.
160.
Assuming that there is nothing strange going on (e.g. sloppy surveying) there are 40 acres in the quarter-quarter section.
One section is equal to one square mile. In one square mile, there are 640 acres, therefore in one quarter of a section of land, there are 160 acres.
Usually 160 acres.
A quarter section is equivalent to 64 hectares. This is because one section is 640 acres and a quarter section is one-fourth of that area.
1 "section" is one square mile = 640 acres1/4 of 1/4 = 1/161/16 of 640 acres = 40 acres, whether with or without a mule
1 section = 1 square mile = 640 acres1/4 x 1/4 = 1/161/16 x 640 = 40 acres
It depends on how the quarter section gets subdivided by the developer. Lot size in the US can be as small as one quarter of an acre, or as large as 10 acres. Since a quarter section is 160 acres (assuming there are no correction lines nearby), there are somewhere between 16 and 640 lots in it.