A meter is a measurement of length - one dimension. A cubic meter is a measure of volume - three dimensions. A cubic meter would be a space one meter wide x one meter deep x one meter high. In effect a cube.
A 1-meter contour interval would be more likely to show a shallow 1.5-meter-deep depression in the ground. A 5-meter contour interval would smooth out such shallow features, making it harder to identify them on the map.
A cubic meter is a unit of volume equal to the volume of a cube measuring 1 meter on each side. It is commonly used to measure the volume of solids and liquids.
You cannot compare volume to area unless you add more information about depth. If you wanted to say "How many liters in one square meter, 3 centimeters deep", we could calculate that.
There is one meter in a meter...
None. Its a hole
1 meter equates to 3.28084 feet.
The volume is 0.7854 m3
m3 is a cubic meter. It is the volume equivalent of a cube 1 meter wide by 1 meter deep by 1 meter tall. 1 m3 is equivalent to 1000 liters.
1 meter
1 cubic meter is 1 meter long. It is 1 meter long by 1 meter wide by 1 meter high. A cubic meter is the shape of a cube or a square.
There is no difference.
I'm assuming you mean one meter deep with a one square meter footprint. The answer is 1*1*1=1m^3 = one cubic meter. Actually, that is how much dirt was taken out to make the hole. There should be no dirt in the hole, otherwise it wouldn't be a hole.
11.5 kilometers deep = 6,288.28 fathoms deep.
One cubic meter cannot be "converted" to a square measure unless we know how "deep" it is being spread. For example, if it is one meter deep, then it would cover one square meter; but if it is two meters deep, then it would cover half that area. If it were, say, 1 cm deep, then it could cover a million square centimeters (100 x 100 x 100).
A meter is a measurement of length - one dimension. A cubic meter is a measure of volume - three dimensions. A cubic meter would be a space one meter wide x one meter deep x one meter high. In effect a cube.
meter