The amount of iron ore found in one square mile can vary widely depending on the region and geological conditions. In general, estimates suggest that there may be several million tons of iron ore present in one square mile, but this can be influenced by factors such as ore grade, depth of the orebody, and mining feasibility.
The pressure under 1 mile of the Earth's crust is approximately 2,300 pounds per square inch (psi). This pressure increases with depth due to the weight of the overlying rock and material.
To determine the amount of iron required, you first need to find the molar mass of sulfur (32.06 g/mol) and the molar mass of iron (55.85 g/mol). Then, use the stoichiometry of the reaction to calculate the amount of iron needed, which is 64.4 g.
Iron Bisglycinate contains about 20% elemental iron, so 25 mg of Iron Bisglycinate would contain approximately 5 mg of elemental iron.
Hematite is composed of approximately 70% iron by weight.
Iron does not react with potassium hydroxide under normal conditions because iron is a less reactive metal compared to potassium. Potassium hydroxide is a strong base that can react with more reactive metals such as aluminum and zinc, but typically not with iron.
A square mile is a unit of area. If we have a square with each side one mile long, the square covers one square mile. A mile is a unit of length. Length has only one dimension while area is two dimensions.
One square mile equates to approximately 2.589996 square meters
A 10-mile square of land would cover an area of 100 square miles.
A square mile is equal to 640 acres or approximately 2.59 square kilometers.
About $12.80 per square mile.
A square mile is equal to 5,280 feet by 5,280 feet, which means there are 27,878,400 square feet in one square mile.
2.59 square kilometres.
It is an average of 2.59 square kilometres.
384 acres is 16,727,040 square feet or 0.6 square mile.
524,800,000 acres was the total land mass purchased.There are 640 acres in a square mile...$0.03 cents per acre OR $18.29 per square mile.
97105 square miles of nothingness :)
This question doesn't make any sense. A square mile is a two dimensional measurement of area, a kilometre is a one dimensional measurement of length. The two measures are incompatible - so you cannot have any square mile in a kilometre or kilometres in a square mile.