50 lbs or less if this is black pond ice. White, slushy snow ice is half of that. Usually 3 inches is the minimum safe thickness for a single cross country skier, and 4 inches for an ice fisherman on foot. If the ice is only 1 inch thick- STAY OFF!
"The formulation of a problem is often more essential than its solution, which may be merely a matter of mathematical or experimental skill." - Albert Einstein
Presumably you are asking about ice that is one half inch thick. The difficulty is that you have not provided the area of the ice you want to weigh. Obviously, a piece of ice that is one half inch thick, and one inch wide and one inch long, will weigh much less than a piece of ice that is one half inch thick, and ten feet wide and ten feet long.
Pay attention to what Albert Einstein said.
Answer: Ice has a density of 0.9167 g/cm³ at 0 °C 1 cubic foot of water weights 62.4 lb/cu.ft. Therefore 1 sq. ft. of ice weighs 62.4 x .9167 / 12 = 4.77 lb
14 lbs per sq ft
about half of a 2 ft by 2ft block of ice
there isn't any soil, a hole is a hole. if it had soil in it, it wouldn't be a hole would it.
That depends on the shape of the ice, how cold it starts out and the condition of the surroundings. All other variables being the same, a block of ice starting at 0 °C will take less time to melt than one that starts at -100 °. Ice in an oven at 250 °C will melt faster than one sitting on the table in a 25 °C room. If the surroundings are maintained at - 50 °C, it will NEVER melt (although it might sublime). A block of ice 1 ft x 1 ft x ft will probably melt slower than one that is 6 inches x 6 inches x 4 feet, yet they are both "a cubic foot". Ice sitting on a plank of wood and surrounded by air at 50 °C will melt slower than the same block of ice dropped into liquid water at 50 °C. A block of ice will melt slower in the shade than if it is moved into the sunlight. Ice floating quietly in water will melt slower than if the water is swirling around it. Ice will melt slower in still air melts slower than ice with a wind blowing across it. A cubic foot of ice as one contiguous block will melt slower than if you take that same block and break it up in pieces. You have to be very specific about the conditions in order to make it possible to answer the question. For example: "A block of ice 1 ft x 1 ft x 1 ft initially at a uniform 0 °C floating in an unstirred vat of pure water which is maintained at a constant 45 °C"
.8kg Save
If you make the ton of ice in a perfect cube, it would be 3 feet, 3 and one quarter inch long on each side. That's about 1.3 cubic yards.
10.2 pounds
That depends on the thickness of the ice. It also depends on the shape of the outline of the 1 square foot. For example ... a square with 1-ft sides can certainly support more weight than a rectangle that's 1-inch wide and 144-inches long.
1 cubic yard of ice has a weight of 49421 pound-force.
12 pounds (5.4 kg).
From 180 To 215
1/16 lb * approx 32 ft/s2 = 2 ft pounds per second2.
64#/cubic foot
Use a BMI calculator.
99-132 lbs Normal weight for 5"1
82.99 lb of dry soil
The answers is: 15.315 lbs. Cubic Ft Weight (Lbs) 1ft X 1Ft X .375 in <> .375 CF ---------> ? 1ft X 1Ft X 1Ft <> 1 CF ---------> 490 (490*.375)/1= 15.315lbs.
You need to know how much a cubic foot of snow weighs. It depends on the sort of snow. There is 1500 cu ft of snow on the roof.
smithy bob cm2