That depends on how big the mound is and what it's made of. I will assume that a mound=pound 1 pound = 0.4536 kg
Although called a diamond, the four bases actually form a square. The infield extends beyond this area, between the first and third bases in an arc of a circle with the pitcher's mound as centre. There is no mathematical name for the shape.
It could be a number of things. The shape of the mound may provide a clue. If the entrance is plugged; it's a gopher.
Sphere is the ball, the infield grass is a diamond, the field is a 2-d cone, the bases are squares, the mound is a half sphere, the rubber on the mound is a rectangle, the bats are cylinders.
The pitcher's mound is 10 inches off the ground when compared to home plate. The distance between the pitcher's mound and home plate is 60 feet, 6 inches or 726 inches. We can use these to formulate a triangle where the triangle's base is 726 inches and its height is 10 inches, with an unknown hypotenuse length. We assume the triangle to be a right triangle at the pitcher's mound on the ground, and an angle of elevation (a) at home plate. Using the Pythagorean theorem, we find that the length of this triangle's hypotenuse is 726.06886 inches, and using the law of sines, we find that the angle of elevation of the pitcher's mound from home plate is 0.78914 degrees.
There are certain things a pitcher may not do while within this circle. Fore example, when the umpire puts a new ball in play, some pitchers will spit on their hands and rub the ball up. Done outside this circle, it is legal; done inside this circle, it is illegal.
No
Pitchers mound
There is a pitcher's circle but no actual mound of dirt. There is a pitcher's circle but no actual mound of dirt.
to legally play only one person can be on the pitchers mound while the game is in play
The diameter of an MLB pitcher's mound is 18 feet.
My son was on the grouds crew for a AAA minor league team, and I saw them build a mound in the indoor batting cages. I was told by the head grouds keeper that the mound is 12 " above home plate with a 1" fer foot drop going from the mound toward home plate. Also, the top area of the mound, a 24" circle is totally flat around the mound, something I never knew before.
YES
By regulation, the peak of the mound should rise 10 1/2 inches above home plate.
Measure from the front edge of the pitching rubber to the back tip of home plate.
second
60'6"