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Yes, volume is in cubic feet
The answer depends largely on where you are along the Canyon...Grand Canyon Village is on the South Rim of the Grand Canyon at an elevation just short of 7,000 feet. The river is about 2,000 feet above sea level, so the depth of the Canyon from Grand Canyon Village is around 5,000 feet. North Rim, near where Grand Canyon Lodge is, is about 1,000 feet higher than South Rim, making North rim to the bottom of the canyon 6,000 feet down.
Volume in cubic feet = Length in feet * Width in feet * Height in feet.
The volume in cubic feet of a cylinder with a diameter of 2 feet and a height of 6 feet is 18.85 cubic feet.
The website eHow.com has come up with a volume for the Grand Canyon of 2098.5 cu.mi. (308,892,672,000,000 cu.ft.) with an average depth of 4000 feet, though they are quick to point out that this is a very rough estimate.
The Grand Canyon's elevation is 8,000 feet (2,440 meters).
Cubic feet is one unit of measurement of volume, though any cubic unit of measurement (cubic centimeters, cubic yards, ect.) is representative of a volume.
The volume of Earth is approximately 3.82532 x 1022 cubic feet (38,253,200,000,000,000,000,000 cubic feet).
Any volume is measured in cubic feet, so yes, furnace volume is measured in cubic feet. Square feet is used for linear measurements.
The volume in cubic feet of a cube 3' by 3' by 3' is: 27 cubic feet.
The volume in cubic feet of a cylinder a diameter of 1.9166 feet and height of 2.6666 feet is: 7.6933 cubic feet.
Yes. The units of volume would be cubic feet or cubic meters.