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2007-01-09 14:04:59 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

What is Square miles*Depth if not cubic ft?

2007-01-09 14:11:18 · update #1

The sq miles is 9,960 and the depth is 1,960

2007-01-09 14:16:13 · update #2

depth is 1,960 ft

2007-01-09 14:16:40 · update #3

5 answers

No. First off, what are the dimensions of depth? If that's in miles, volume is in cubic miles. If it's in feet, you need to get area in sq
ft.
Edit: OK, real numbers.

1960 ft = 1960/5280 mi, or 0.371 mi.
V = 9960 sq mi X 0.371 mi = 3697.273 mi^3

cu mi = (5280 ft)^3 = 147,197,952,000 ft^3

V in ft^3 = 3697.273 mi^3 X 147,197,952,000 ft^3/mi^3 =
544,230,973,440,000 ft^3

2007-01-09 14:12:21 · answer #1 · answered by dollhaus 7 · 0 0

Mile^2*Depth=L^2*L=L^3

2007-01-09 23:43:54 · answer #2 · answered by manchester 3 · 0 0

Yes a MI^2*Depth is a form of volume like a ft^3 is a form of volume. Remember volume is length cubed.

In terms of dimensions alone

L= length

Depth=L
Mile=L

Mile^2*Depth=L^2*L=L^3

you can do the unit conversion yourself.

2007-01-09 22:27:33 · answer #3 · answered by Scott S 4 · 0 0

It's all a matter of units. If Area (in your case sq. miles) is expressed in sq. feet, and depth is also expressed in feet, feet2 x feet = feet3 (or cubic feet). Square miles just does not translate, and you need to convert to units that are universal

2007-01-09 22:12:59 · answer #4 · answered by Anican76 2 · 0 0

nope. square FEET times depth would be though.

2007-01-09 22:09:10 · answer #5 · answered by car of boat 4 · 0 0

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