56 x 1 = 56 cubic feet Specific weights of Earth (packed)= 95 lb per cubic foot 56 x 95 = 5,320 lbs (US) = 2.4 metric ton
28' x 14' (392 square feet) = 43.5 square yards of carpet needed.
13' x 15' (195 square feet) = 21.67 square yards of carpet needed.
348 square feet are 38.666667 square yards.
784 square feet requires a minimum of 87.1 square yards of carpet.
To calculate the amount of fill dirt needed for a berm that is 4 feet high and 200 feet long, you also need to know the width of the berm. Assuming a width of, for example, 3 feet, the volume can be calculated using the formula: Volume = Length × Width × Height. In this case, it would be 200 feet × 3 feet × 4 feet = 2,400 cubic feet of fill dirt needed. Adjust the width accordingly for a different volume.
To raise 1 acre by 8 inches, you would need approximately 2,722 cubic yards of dirt. This calculation is based on the formula for volume of a rectangular prism (length x width x height) multiplied by the area of 1 acre in square yards (43,560 square feet).
Approximately 7,260 yards. You need 6 yards of soil per 1000 square feet for 2"
The answer will depend on the depth to which the area is covered.
You can measure the surface of the dirt in square yards. That would be nine square feet.However the volume or amount of dirt cannot be measured in square yards or square feet. The amount of dirt in a volume of one cubic yard would be 27 cubic feet. ( 3x3x3=27 )The amount of dirt in a square yard to a depth of 0.5 feet would be 4.5 cubic feet. (3x3x0.5=4.5)
1 square yard of dirt covers up to 9 square feet of ground.
To determine the volume of dirt in this scenario, you would multiply the area (3 acres) by the depth (200 feet). First, convert acres to square feet (1 acre = 43,560 square feet). Then, multiply the area (3 acres = 130,680 square feet) by the depth (200 feet) to find the total volume of dirt.
9 square feet.
1 foot by 36 sq feet = 36 cubic feet of dirt is needed
1 cubic yard of covers 27/depth in feet square feet.
184.08 square feet is needed.
This is a nonsense question. Tons of dirt can be converted to cubic feet, depending on moisture and dirt type, but not to sf or square feet.
A yard of dirt is equivalent to 27 cubic feet in volume, or a cube that measures 3 feet in length, width, and height. This amount of dirt can cover an area of 9 square feet at a depth of 3 feet.