None! Very funny!
If it's a hole, there would be no dirt in it, right?
None. The size of the hole is a measure of space in which there is no dirt!
To calculate the volume of dirt in the hole, you multiply the length, width, and depth together. Therefore, the volume of the hole would be 6 meters x 2 meters x 1 meter = 12 cubic meters. Thus, there are 12 cubic meters of dirt in the hole.
This is probably a trick question: there is no dirt in a hole. However, the hole was originally filled in with 24 cubic feet of dirt.
There is NO dirt, it is a hole! If you want to fill it with dirt, that is 4x6x12=288 cubic feet, weighing about 28,800 pounds
Width of hole: 6510/(40*10.6) = about 15 feet to the nearest integer
a lot of dirt.
Theoretically, none. The amount of dirt excavated to create such a hole would be 1 cubic metre. However, excavated dirt (depending on the nature of the dirt) can increase in mass by up to a third the original size. That is why when you dig a big hole then fill it in (getting all the dirt back) the hole is raised on top not flat.
If it's a hole, there would be no dirt in it, right?
504 cubic feet of dirt. For the answer just times width by length by depth 4 x 6 = 24 24 x 21 = 504
No dirt because its a hole
There is no dirt in the hole because a hole, by definition, is an empty space.
Volume = Length x width x height =4x15x15 =900 Cubic Feet
None. Its a hole
none, it is a hole
None. The size of the hole is a measure of space in which there is no dirt!
None. Since it is a hole, there is no dirt in it. A hole, by definition, must be empty.