1/(the capacity of each wheelbarrow, in cubic meters)
twelve
While this will depend on the size of the wheelbarrow, an industrial wheelbarrow is about 1/12th of a cubic meter. 12 of them is one meter, 1,200 of them for 100 cubic meters.
( 1 ) divided by (the capacity, in cubic meters, of the wheelbarrow you're using)
if it is solid stone, I don't think there will be any wheel barrows in there, unless you carve one out
According to concrete taxi: http://www.concretetaxi.com/faq.asp#77 ~15 wheelbarrow loads in a single cubic meter of concrete According to concrete taxi: http://www.concretetaxi.com/faq.asp#77 ~15 wheelbarrow loads in a single cubic meter of concrete
It depends of course a bit on the size of the wheelbarrow and on how high you want to pile up the sand. But a typical wheelbarrow might hold about 85 liters of sand. 1 cubic meter equals 1,000 liters. So you would need about 12 wheelbarrow loads to get 1 cubic meter.
35.315
Wheelbarrows come in many sizes. I would say even a large one would take 5-6 loads to make a cubic yard.
1,000
It depends of course a bit on the size of the wheelbarrow and on how high you want to pile up the sand. But a typical wheelbarrow might hold about 85 liters of sand. 1 cubic meter equals 1,000 liters. So you would need about 12 wheelbarrow loads to get 1 cubic meter.
Given a 6 cubic foot wheelbarrow, and that there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, you would need 4.5 wheelbarrows to make a cubic yard. The wheelbarrow may have the capacity stamped on it. David