Noe but it can be filled in with 12 cubic feet of dirt
An acre is 43,560 square feet. If you have a depth of 1 foot, the volume of dirt in cubic feet is 43,560 cubic feet. Since there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, you would divide 43,560 by 27, resulting in approximately 1,613.33 cubic yards of dirt in an acre that is 1 foot deep.
There is 98.17477042 cubic feet of dirt in a 5 foot deep hole that is 5 foot across.
1 foot by 36 sq feet = 36 cubic feet of dirt is needed
6 cubic square
27 square feet. A "yard" is a short form of "cubic yard" of something...dirt, concrete, etc. A cubic yard is 3 x 3 x 3 = 27 cubic feet.
An acre is 43,560 square feet. If you have a depth of 1 foot, the volume of dirt in cubic feet is 43,560 cubic feet. Since there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, you would divide 43,560 by 27, resulting in approximately 1,613.33 cubic yards of dirt in an acre that is 1 foot deep.
There is 98.17477042 cubic feet of dirt in a 5 foot deep hole that is 5 foot across.
1 foot by 36 sq feet = 36 cubic feet of dirt is needed
You will need 1500 cubic feet.
6 cubic square
if you mean a 30 foot diameter circle, then pi x 152 x 3 = 2119.5 cubic feet of dirt
To calculate the cubic weight of dirt, you need to know the density of the dirt. Let's assume the density of the dirt is 100 pounds per cubic foot. Multiply the volume (1920 cubic feet) by the density (100 pounds per cubic foot) to get the total weight. Therefore, the cubic weight of dirt for 1920 cubic feet would be 192,000 pounds.
27 square feet. A "yard" is a short form of "cubic yard" of something...dirt, concrete, etc. A cubic yard is 3 x 3 x 3 = 27 cubic feet.
To calculate the amount of dirt needed to fill a space that is 100 feet long, 100 feet wide, and 1 foot deep, you can use the formula for volume: length × width × depth. In this case, the volume would be 100 ft × 100 ft × 1 ft = 10,000 cubic feet. Therefore, you would need 10,000 cubic feet of dirt to fill that area.
This problem gets easy quickly if you put everything in the same units. When you see 4 inches, think of one third of a foot. Fifteen feet times a third of a foot gives five square feet. Multiply 5 by 20, 100 cubic feet. If you are going to get the dirt by digging it from compacted soil, get 100 cubic feet. If you are getting loose dirt, better get 120 cubic feet - it will settle !
The formula for the volume is length * height * depth (or width) = 33 =3*3*3 = 27 cubic feet, but the answer to the question is 0; there's no dirt in a hole... We are not digging a hole here; we are building a mini-mastaba that is 1 foot deep above the original ground level. 48 cubic feet of dirt is required which equals 48/27 = 1.78 cubic yards of dirt.
AnswerNothing.... (no dirt in a hole)Answer1800 lbsSize of hole = 3 x 3 x 2 = 18 cubic feet, x 100 lbs per cubic foot = 1800 lbsAnswerIf there is dirt in the hole, it would remove the hole, so there is no real answer to this. You could ask "If dirt is 100 lbs per cubic foot, what is the weight of 18 cubic feet?", to which the answer is 18*100=1800 lbs... Have fun!