Measuring land on a hill side

Volume is a very different matter to surface area, it may seem counter-intuitive that the volume of a coal pile could be estimated within a given tolerance, but its surface area is simply not well-defined.

I thought It was in this thread but must have been on a different message board. Sorry… :smack:

On my farmland, the USDA (US Department of Agriculture) paperwork lists the acreage and then a separate figure for the farmable acres, which is almost always different. They subtract out all the land used in roads, driveways, buildings, farmyards, even the fences around the fields. This farmable acres figure is calculated to the nearest hundredth of an acre, and is very important to the farmer. For example, crop insurance charges are calculated from it, as is the field yield.

At our farm, in the mainly flat area of western Minnesota, this figure is always smaller than the actual legal size of the farm parcel of land. But I suppose that in very hilly country, there could actually be more ‘farmable acres’ than the actual legal acreage of the land!