All of it
You are mixing volume (square yard) and area (length x width). How deep do you want the dirt? One foot deep you need about 80 square yards of dirt.
None, if it is a hole.
6 cubic square
Just multiply 1/2 foot x 12,000 square feet. The answer will be in cubic feet.
None Or it wouldn't be a hole.
You are mixing volume (square yard) and area (length x width). How deep do you want the dirt? One foot deep you need about 80 square yards of dirt.
none.
To determine the volume of dirt in this scenario, you would multiply the area (3 acres) by the depth (200 feet). First, convert acres to square feet (1 acre = 43,560 square feet). Then, multiply the area (3 acres = 130,680 square feet) by the depth (200 feet) to find the total volume of dirt.
None, if it is a hole.
It would not weigh anything because there is no dirt inside of a hole.
600lb.
6 cubic square
There is no dirt in the hole, but if you want to know how much dirt was removed to create the hole, then:3 acres is an amount of area (you don't have 'square acres'). You could express this volume as acre-feet, but this term is usually used when referring to flooding (an acre of land flooded with 1 foot of water, for example). 1 acre = 43560 square feet, so 3 acres = 130680 square feet.(130680 square feet)*(200 feet) = 26136000 cubic feet {26.136 million cubic feet} In the dirt industry, the standard measurement is cubic yards {often referred to as just 'yards' of dirt}. There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, so this is equivalent to 968000 cubic yards.
There is no dirt. It's a hole.
Just multiply 1/2 foot x 12,000 square feet. The answer will be in cubic feet.
There is no dirt in a hole that is 3 feet deep and six inches in diameter.
There is no dirt in a hole, as a hole is an empty space where dirt has been removed.