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Just done the convesion again from scratch. I get 35,199,875,834 cubic metres. ... which is right, as there's a factor of 1000 between litres and m^3. Now I'm off to extend the Magnitude page chain to get to this point! -- [[User:Tarquin|Tarquin]] |
Just done the convesion again from scratch. I get 35,199,875,834 cubic metres. ... which is right, as there's a factor of 1000 between litres and m^3. Now I'm off to extend the Magnitude page chain to get to this point! -- [[User:Tarquin|Tarquin]] |
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Yuck! This is an American Dam with English descended units! |
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If I had a CRC handy I would convert back to acre feet but alas I shall have to leave your alien units intact. 8) [[User:Mirwin|mirwin]] 02:05 Sep 5, 2002 (PDT) |
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The lake holds:
Will replace in article as soon as I work out the zeroes in megalitres.
35,200 gigalitres or 35.2 teralitres. -- SJK
Just done the convesion again from scratch. I get 35,199,875,834 cubic metres. ... which is right, as there's a factor of 1000 between litres and m^3. Now I'm off to extend the Magnitude page chain to get to this point! -- Tarquin
Acre feet? acre feet? I'd never heard of them before today, and according to http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictA.html they are only used to measure dams. Not very useful to compare with the volumes of other things. -- Tarquin