24 feet
if you mean a 30 foot diameter circle, then pi x 152 x 3 = 2119.5 cubic feet of dirt
It depends on whether the dimensions given are in feet or yards or metres or some other unit.
24*4*6 = 576 cubic inches or 2*(1/3)*(1/2) = 1/3 cubic feet.
*
The answer will depend on how long the hole is. The hole has 3 dimensions that determine its volume. You have provided measurements of only two dimensions.
0. zip. none. na-tah. Think about it. If there was a hole with dirt in it, what would that be called? Huh? I'd call it anything but a hole.
300 cubic feet of dirt
36 cubic feet of dirt=)
dunnoo....find out urself!
This is a nonsense question. Tons of dirt can be converted to cubic feet, depending on moisture and dirt type, but not to sf or square feet.
The area of the garden is 9 x 4= 36 ft2, so the volume of dirt you need would be length x width x depth. Since you didn't say what the depth was, the number of bags of dirt, which is equal to the volume you want to fill in cubic feet is just 36 x the depth you want to fill with dirt. If you only want to have about a 2 inch layer of dirt all over your garden, you need 36 ft2 x 1/6 ft = 6 cubic feet = 6 bags of dirt. Good luck!
To fill a hole 2 feet long, 4 feet wide, and 6 feet deep would take 48 (2 x 4 x 6) cubic feet of dirt.
None it's a hole
Convert everything to feet, then multiply length x width x height. Answer is in cubic feet.
If the raised garden has dimensions of 5 x 5 x 1 then it requires 25 cubic feet of dirt to fill it.
0.969 - 1.0710000000000002 m^3
1 foot by 36 sq feet = 36 cubic feet of dirt is needed