One half mile times one half mile is equal to one quarter square mile.
No, nine and a half acres does not equal one quarter mile. One acre is equal to 43,560 square feet, while one mile is equal to 5,280 feet. Therefore, one quarter mile is equal to 1,320 feet, which is not equivalent to nine and a half acres.
a quarter mile by half mile
it is half of 5,280
The area is three eigths of a square mile.
Most North American tracks are about one mile and a half. Some are one mile, others a mile and a quarter. The most I've seen is a mile and a half (minus the shoot). Or maybe a mile and three quarters.
A quarter section of land is 160 acres, and one acre is approximately 0.0015625 square miles. Therefore, a quarter section of land is about 0.25 square miles.
The Kentucky Derby is a mile and a quarter long. I believe it was originally a bit longer - a mile and a half(?)A mile and a quarter.
1/4 mile
2
There are 2 furlongs in one quarter of a mile.There are 440 yards in one quarter of a mile.There are 1320 feet in one quarter of a mile.There are 15840 inches in one quarter of a mile.
Infinitely many.I will use a variant of Zeno's paradox to illustrate this.Before you can drive a mile you must drive half a mile. So the event of driving a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving half a mile.But before you can drive half a mile you must drive a quarter of a mile. So the event of driving each half of a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving a quarter of a mile - making 4 sub-events in all.And then each of them can be split into two and so on, and on.Infinitely many.I will use a variant of Zeno's paradox to illustrate this.Before you can drive a mile you must drive half a mile. So the event of driving a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving half a mile.But before you can drive half a mile you must drive a quarter of a mile. So the event of driving each half of a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving a quarter of a mile - making 4 sub-events in all.And then each of them can be split into two and so on, and on.Infinitely many.I will use a variant of Zeno's paradox to illustrate this.Before you can drive a mile you must drive half a mile. So the event of driving a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving half a mile.But before you can drive half a mile you must drive a quarter of a mile. So the event of driving each half of a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving a quarter of a mile - making 4 sub-events in all.And then each of them can be split into two and so on, and on.Infinitely many.I will use a variant of Zeno's paradox to illustrate this.Before you can drive a mile you must drive half a mile. So the event of driving a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving half a mile.But before you can drive half a mile you must drive a quarter of a mile. So the event of driving each half of a mile can be split into two sub-events of driving a quarter of a mile - making 4 sub-events in all.And then each of them can be split into two and so on, and on.