Orders of magnitude (one cubic metre to one cubic kilometre)

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The following is a table of objects with volumes or capacities of between one cubic metre and one cubic kilometre.

a cubic metre of concrete
a TEU container
an Olympic swimming pool
LZ 129 Hindenburg
Great Pyramid of Giza
The Three Gorges Dam
Sydney Harbour
volume (m3) example
1×100 one cubic metre, one kilolitre or one stère—volume of a large domestic fridge-freezer (external dimensions)
3.85×101 external volume a standard 20-foot ("TEU") cargo container, which has a capacity of 33.1 thousand cubic metres
7.7×101 external volume a standard 40-foot ("FEU") cargo container, which has a capacity of 67.5 thousand cubic metres
1.05×102 volume of a rear-engine Leyland Titan London double-decker bus
1.49×102 volume of any A Division New York City Subway car
1×103 one cubic decametre or one megalitre
1.233×103 one acre-foot
2.5×103 volume of an Olympic size swimming pool of minimal depth (50 m × 25 m × 2 m).
3.054×103 volume of each of the nine spheres of the Atomium in Brussels
1.13×104 gas volume in the first zeppelin LZ 1
1.1866×104 amount of concrete in Trbovlje Chimney
1.56×104 Quebec's 2001 output of maple syrup
5.0×104 typical volume of a large gasometer
8.5–9.9×104 volume of the Royal Albert Hall auditorium[1]
1.84×105 volume of gas in the USS Macon (ZRS-5) zeppelin
2.11890×105 volume of gas in the Hindenburg zeppelin
6.50×105 volume of crude oil that can be carried aboard the Knock Nevis supertanker
9.66×105 volume of Taipei 101's gross floor space[2]
1×106 one cubic hectometre, one gigalitre or one kilostère
1.4×106 volume the 1910 Lakeview Gusher oil spilt (the biggest oil gusher in US history)
1.5644×106 volume of concrete in the Panama Canal Locks
2.6006×106 volume of stone in the Great Pyramid of Giza
3×106 approximately amount of mud and clay that slid into the South Nation River valley as a landslide on 20 June 1993
3.33×106 volume of concrete in Hoover Dam
3.664883×106 volume of the NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building
8×106 volume of chalk excavated in the construction of the Channel Tunnel
1×107 volume of Chagan Lake, artificial lake created by nuclear explosion
1.7×107 volume of material in the Gatun Dam, completed in 1913
2.8×107 volume of concrete in the Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest concrete structure
4.3×107 volume of Aswan Dam
9×107 volume of gas required per day by India in 2005
1.01×108 volume of the Grimsel reservoir
1.73×108 volume of Lake Baldegg, Switzerland
2.05×108 volume of material excavated in the construction of the Panama Canal
2.2×108 volume of Lac de la Gruyère, Switzerland
2.85×108 volume of Lake Halwill, Switzerland
3.20–3.35×108 volume of the Great Wall of China
3–5×108 volume of all humans alive on the planet (based on an average mass of 40–70 kg per human)
4×108 predicted volume of natural gas required per day by India in 2025
5×108 one sydharb—volume of Sydney Harbour, Australia[3]
6.93×108 volume of Lake Murten, Switzerland
← one cubic millimetre to one cubic metre       one cubic kilometre to one cubic megametre →

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 198000 square metres floor space from Structurae multiplied by the "Slab to Slab Height" of 4.20 metres from taipei-101.com.tw gives 831600 cubic metres. Floors one to eight can be approximated as 4300 square metres (from [1]) times 8 times 4.2 metres, or an additional 134400 cubic metres, giving an estimated 966000 cubic metres.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.