That is a very vague question. But some of it has to do with what type of wood you are using, how it was cut, and how long the wood is.
~600-800 kg
Muck fires are underground. We get tons of them in CA where I live. The fire burns a tree or a bush or something and the embers travel down through the roots. They cause a major problem once the above ground fire is out. they just light new fires
Silt soil that is constantly damp, to the point of being "muck", is excellent for growing celery. But silt is the "mid-range" type of soil (above sand, but below clay in density) and it is the basis of most good growing soil. It is not a perfect soil by itself - perfect soil balances four things: Sand, silt, clay and organic matter.
The term "muckrakers" was coined by President Theodore Roosevelt in a speech in 1906. He used it to describe journalists and writers who exposed corruption and abuses in society, likening their work to "raking the muck" of society to bring these issues to light. The term stuck and became associated with investigative journalists who sought to uncover and reform societal problems.
Muck is a mass noun, it has no plural form.
A kilogram is a unit of mass, not weight. In Earth's standard gravity, a kilogram mass weighs about 9.8 Newtons.
No, muck fires can start anywhere there is muck. That's why they're called MUCK fires, not Florida fires.
The truck got stuck in the muck.
Daniel Muck was born in 1976.
Daniel Muck is 168 cm.
Karl Muck was born in 1859.
Karl Muck died in 1940.
Muck Sticky was born in 1977.
Muck fires are difficult to fight. Often the only way to stop a muck fire is to contain it.
Karl Muck is pronounced as "carl mo͝ok."
The duration of Common As Muck is 3000.0 seconds.