1 E+12 m³

To help compare different orders of magnitudes this page lists volumes between 1,000 and 1 million cubic kilometres (1012 to 1015 cubic metres). See also volumes or capacities of other orders of magnitude.

  • Volumes smaller than 1 trillion (a million million) cubic metres

  • 1 E+12 m³ or 1012 m³ equals:
    • 1 trillion m³ (mainly formerly: 1 billion m³ in long scale terminology, one million million cubic metres)
    • 1,000 km³ (cubic kilometres)
  • 1.1 trillion m³ — volume of the Aral Sea in 1960
  • 2.76 trillion m³ — volume of Lake Victoria
  • 2.8 trillion m³ — volume of magma erupted by the Toba supervolcano 74,000 years ago
  • 4.918 trillion m³ — volume of Lake Michigan
  • 5 Trillion m³ - volume of the Fish Canyon Tuff erupted by the La Garita Caldera
  • 5.5 trillion m³ — volume of the asteroid 433 Eros

  • 1 E+13 m³ or 1013 m³ equals:
    • 10 trillion m³ (mainly formerly: 10 billion m³ in long scale terminology, ten million million cubic metres)
    • 10,000 km³ (cubic kilometres)
  • 12.2 trillion m³ — volume of Lake Superior
  • 18.4 trillion m³ — volume of Lake Tanganyika
  • 23 trillion m³ — volume of Lake Baikal

  • 1 E+14 m³ or 1014 m³ equals:
    • 100 trillion m³ (mainly formerly: 100 billion m³ in long scale terminology, one hundred million million cubic metres)
    • 100,000 km³ (cubic kilometres)
  • 550 trillion m³ — volume of the Black Sea

  • Volumes larger than or equal to 1 quadrillion (one thousand million million) cubic metres

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