there is nothing that is called that im sorry for you being stupid and answering that dumb of a question!
Incombe Hole is located in Chinnor, Oxfordshire, England. It is a wooded area with footpaths and trails for hiking and exploring nature.
Probably not, as all the trails are footpaths, and there are lots of wardens around usually.For Mountain Biking in the Louth area, try www.louthnet.com/LAMB.
I would be inclined to follow lesser used A and B roads wherever possible, using marker footpaths too when they appear (not sure how frequently that area of the UK).
If I were driving along main and secondary roads only, I would not need to see footpaths marked on my small scale map. If I was walking in the Peak District (for example) I would need a large scale map that showed the footpaths I would want to follow over farmland, etc. Some maps make be specially printed to show the river and stream system in an area.
if given the central angle and the area of the circle, then by proportion: Given angle / sector area = 360 / Entire area, then solve for the sector area
Divide its area by a given side
That's volume. Area is the measurement of a given surface.
The area of a hexagon with a given side of 20 is 1,039
The area of a hexagon with a given side of 20cm is 1039.2cm2
If the stick is just sitting there, it doesn't exert any force at all. If you're swinging the stick, the shape of the stick won't matter much; the force will be determined by the speed and mass of the stick. If you are poking with the stick, then the FORCE will be the same whether it is blunt or pointed - but a pointed stick will concentrate the force into a smaller AREA, so the force per area will be a lot higher with a sharp stick than with a blunt one.
By using the other information supplied about the circle to calculate either its radius (from which its area can be calculated) or its area (if the circle is similar to another with a given area and some ratio between the two circle is given):If the diameter is given: radius = diameter ÷ 2If the circumference is given: radius = circumference ÷ 2πIf the circle is similar to another circle which has a given area, and the length ratio is given; square the length ratio to get the area ratio and apply to the given area.
It should be relatively easy to find the surface area of a box when you are given the surface area.