In southern Iowa it goes anywhere from 2300 a acre to 4700+ a acre for tillable
$7000 to $10.900
1 dollar 1 dollar
ten %
Southern Manitoba is classified as Interior Plains (Prairies). Much of the rest is Canadian Shield, a rocky region with only a thin layer of soil on top. In northeastern Manitoba are the Hudson Bay Lowlands, wetlands surrounding the southern portion of Hudson's Bay.
2011 values for land in the US range from as little as a few hundred dollars for remote, non-irrigated, non-productive land to as much as $100,000 per acre for land slated for development. Prime US farmland, such as you might see in parts of Iowa or Illinois are averaging $5,000 to $7,000 an acre.
The most productive farmland in Canada is located in Southwestern Ontario, particularly along the shore of Lake Erie. This is owing to its southern location (lots of sun), reliability of rainfall and inexhaustible water supply (the Great Lakes), and rich soil (glaciers and the Great Lakes system deposited topsoil scrapped off the Canadian Shield to the north). Re: the previous answer, while there's a great deal of farmland in Western Canada, it's actually exceedingly poor in quality, in all respects (climate, fertility, etc). E.g. the average price per acre of farmland in Ontario is on the order of 10x more than that in the Prairies, and the best Southwestern Ontario farmland easily fetches 20x as much per acre. [Does the author mean Eastern Ontario, or Lake Superior? He says "Southwestern Ontario", but Lake Erie is in the Southeast of Ontario...]
0.34435 of an Acre.
0.718 of an acre
Lots
yes
An acre is = 43,560 SF; thus, 14,000 SF is ~32.14% of an acre or 350/1089 of an acre.