There is none. Because there is a hole! If you are asking how much dirt can fill the hole, then your answer is 27 cubic feet.
1 foot by 36 sq feet = 36 cubic feet of dirt is needed
Approx 10.3 US gallons.
Since it is a hole, it doesn't have any dirt. But it has the capacity to hold 1 cubic inch.
exactly 27 centimetres cubed
There is none. Because there is a hole! If you are asking how much dirt can fill the hole, then your answer is 27 cubic feet.
1 foot by 36 sq feet = 36 cubic feet of dirt is needed
if you mean a 30 foot diameter circle, then pi x 152 x 3 = 2119.5 cubic feet of dirt
There's no dirt in a hole.
a lot of dirt.
To calculate the volume of dirt needed to fill a circular area, you first need to find the area of the circle (πr^2, where r is the radius). In this case, for a 14-foot circle, the radius is 7 feet. Once you find the area, you can calculate the volume of dirt needed based on the desired depth of filling the circle.
Approx 10.3 US gallons.
12 inch =1 foot
Since it is a hole, it doesn't have any dirt. But it has the capacity to hold 1 cubic inch.
exactly 27 centimetres cubed
300 cubic feet of dirt
At 3 inch deep and 27 foot round that is 3.14 x 27x27x3/12/4 = 143 cubic feet which is 143/27 = 5.3 yards. At 100 pounds/cu ft that weighs 14,300 pounds of dirt