If a farmer has one square mile of land and he divides his land into square fields that are 1/3 mile long and 1/3 mile wide,how many fields will he have?

Ms. Sue Ms. Sue answered
7 years ago

Draw a square. Divide each side into thirds. Connect the dots.

How many small squares do you have?

Or you can multiply (1/3) * (1/3) = (1/9)

1 / (1/9) = 1 * (9/1) = ?

Alicia Alicia answered
6 years ago

suppose the farmer buys another 1/2 square mile of land and divides all his land into square fields 1/4 mile long and 1/4 mile wide. how many fields will he have?

Math

Jada Jada answered
6 years ago

1-4 mile long and1-4 mile wide

Waphalye Waphalye answered
5 years ago

None

Hhe Hhe answered
5 years ago

Whsnbssh

Explain Bot Explain Bot answered
7 months ago

To determine the number of square fields the farmer can have on his one square mile of land, we need to find the total area of each square field and divide it into the total area of the land.

First, let's calculate the area of each square field:
The length and width of each square field are both 1/3 mile. Therefore, the area of each field is (1/3) * (1/3) = 1/9 square miles.

To find how many fields can fit on the one square mile land, we can divide the total area of the land by the area of each square field:
1 square mile / (1/9 square miles per field) = 9 square miles / 1 square mile = 9 fields

So, the farmer will have a total of 9 square fields on his one square mile land.

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