It depends on the moisture content of the manure and soil. Also it depends on the makeup of the soil. A cubic foot of smaller soil particles will weigh more than a very sandy soil which has larger particles.
According to this document
http://ts.nist.gov/ts/htdocs/230/235/weightcart/historyof105-8.pdf
at the US NIST, the average density of dirt is 120 lbs per cubic foot.
1 cubic foot of manure weighs 50 lbs.
The average dirt density is missing.
1,728 cubic inches of it
1 cubic foot holds about 7 gallons of dirt. The weight, however, will depend on how densely packed the dirt is.
About 100 pounds per cubic foot
yes, a way to find out if it weighs more, which has a greater density
Pulverised coal = 38 pounds per cubic foot
450
It would weigh 1,342 pounds.
A cubic foot of loose coal "stoker coal" weighs between 40 and 60 pounds. A solid cubic foot of coal can weight up to 84 pouinds. Moisture and foreign material such as dirt and ash will of course affect the weight.
8ft*6ft*10in 96in*72in*10in 960sqin*72in 69120 cubic inches of dirt or 5760 cubic feet of dirt.
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.
whats sugar beets weigh
1 cubic foot of iron, at room temperature would weigh approx 2190 newtons.