One section is equal to one square mile. In one square mile, there are 640 acres, therefore in one quarter of a section of land, there are 160 acres.
160
100
40
Since a quarter section of land is 160 acres, and 1 acre = 0.404 hectares, then 1 quarter section is equivalent to 64.78 hectares of land.
That would be a 1/16th quarter: 40 acres.
80 acres = 37.374 hectares.
There are four quarters to a section, and each quarter also has four quarters in the US land survey system. So you could say there are 16 quarters. For example, if you came across a land plot description that looked like this: Sec. 32, NW 1/4 SW 1/4, you would read it thusly: "The northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 32."
64.752 hectares in a quarter
Since a quarter section of land is 160 acres, and 1 acre = 0.404 hectares, then 1 quarter section is equivalent to 64.78 hectares of land.
Any quarter section is comprised of 160 acres.
You haven't said a 'quarter' of what. If it's a quarter section, then there are 160 acres in it.
160 acres.
160.
That would be a 1/16th quarter: 40 acres.
Assuming that there is nothing strange going on (e.g. sloppy surveying) there are 40 acres in the quarter-quarter section.
It depends on how the quarter section gets subdivided by the developer. Lot size in the US can be as small as one quarter of an acre, or as large as 10 acres. Since a quarter section is 160 acres (assuming there are no correction lines nearby), there are somewhere between 16 and 640 lots in it.
Usually 160 acres.
It would be equal to 1/16th of the total plot of land.
1 "section" is one square mile = 640 acres1/4 of 1/4 = 1/161/16 of 640 acres = 40 acres, whether with or without a mule
1 section = 640 acres(north HALF) of (southeast QUARTER) = (1/2) x (1/4) = 1/8th section = 640/8 = 80 acres