I can't tell what the units of the "200 x 10" are, so I have to make
assumptions.
200 feet x 10 feet . . . . . 74.1 cubic yards for each 1 foot deep
200 feet x 10 inches . . . . 6.17 cubic yards for each 1 foot deep
200 inches x 10 inches . . . 0.514 cubic yard for each 1 foot deep
Provided it's not a short tandem, 15 yards with a 'rock tub' dump body and 16 yards with a 'dirt tub' dump body are typical.
The mineral cleavage is made up of many other particles to form a rock when the rock cleavage is just a rock.
For a fish tank, you need enough gravel to make a thin layer on the bottom of the aquarium. For an outdoor walkway, you need much more.
1. An ancient animal dies and sinks to the bottom of a river 2. Layers of sediments cover the animal's body 3.Over millions of years, the sediment harden to become rock. The animal is preserved as a fossil. 4. The rock erodes. The fossil is exposed on the surface of a rock.
there r about 4 kilograms in a rock
1 cubic yard of crushed rock fills 3/depth in feet square yards.
38ft*6ft*1.5inch = 38/3 yards*2yards*1.5/36yards = 1.055... cubic yards.
Unless the rock is completely flat, there is no point in measuring the rock in yards.
This depends on how much rock you will use per square yard. Suppose you intend to use 1/100 tons (=20 lb) per square yard. Then if you have one ton of rock, it will cover 100 square yards. Similarly, if you intended to use 1/50 tons per square yard, 1 ton will cover 50 square yards. In general you want to use factor labeling: If you are using x tons per square yard, then write this as (1 square yard) / (x tons of rock) = (1/x)*(square yards/tons of rock) This is called a conversion factor. Now, if you have some quantity of rock, say y tons of rock, and you want to see how many square yards it would cover you just multiply (y tons of rock)*(1/x)*(square yards/tons of rock) = y/x (square yards*tons of rock/tons of rock) = y/x square yards since the labels just divide out.
The answer will depend on the depth of the covering that is required. Without that information, the question cannot be answered.
19.38 cubic yards. Round up to at least 20 yards.
1
A cubic yard of stone that is 4" thick would cover 9 square yards or 81 square feet. If you need to cover 7000 sq. ft., you would need roughly 86.5 cubic yards. That's a lot of rock.
there is about 1.25 yards to a ton,so 22.5 tons would be approx 18 yards
You need to know the weight of 1 cub. yard of rock.
Square footage is only PART of the equation. You also need to know the temperature of the ice you're trying to melt.
Not sure what 2b is but crushed concrete with 1 1/2" rock will cover about 60 square feet. 15 tons ends up being around 12 cubic yards.