It depends on its density and the amount.
A piece of wood that is 2 inches thick, 8 inches wide, and 10 feet long will weigh approximately 65-70 pounds, depending on the type of wood and its moisture content.
A piece of 2x3x8 wood typically weighs around 10-12 pounds, depending on the type of wood and its moisture content.
The weight of a piece of wood depends on its density. The density varies between species: from 0.16 g/cc for balsa to as much as 1.33 g/cc for lignum vitae.
25/29.4 = 0.85 grams/cm3
A Wood Stick Match Wieghs.....................0.2 grams so that would be 2/10 of a gram not quite there buddy.
That will depend greatly on the type of wood. A light wood such is balsa is going to be much less than something like teak. A 12 ft. pine 2x6 as used in home construction could weigh about 24 pounds if kiln dried, or as much as 38 pounds if pressure treated.
it varies slightly with each piece of wood (moisture content, etc.) but it's usually around .17 grams per cubic meter
That depends on the type of wood and the size of the logs. A Stere of oak can weigh twice what a stere of pine does
0.3 g/cm2
Wood has a wide range of densities.
To find the density of the wood, use the formula density = mass/volume. The volume of the wood is 3.0 cm × 6.0 cm × 4.0 cm = 72.0 cm³. Therefore, the density is 80.0 grams / 72.0 cm³ ≈ 1.11 g/cm³. Since the density of the wood is greater than the density of water (1.0 g/cm³), the piece of wood would not float in water.
No