Twenty-three years ago I was living in a very unique place in the United States, Mosca, Colorado, home to the largest pile of sand.
Great Sand Dunes National Park photo by NPS |
Kids surfing Medano Creek photo by NPS |
I am pretty sure that kids in the United States would be much better at math if we gave them math problems like the cat litter box and how long does it take for all the water in Lake McDonald to completely change instead of asking if train A is traveling 25mph headed towards train B which is traveling 65mph how long would it take before they collide.
Ok, so what do we need to know to answer the cat litter box question?
1) The volume of a cat litter box.
Wow, who knew there were so many cat litter box styles!? Using just the open top cat
litter boxes found on this website I sat down and averaged the volume of seven different open topped litter boxes. Answer= 3,320 cubic inches
2) Volume of sand contained in the sand dunes.
Truth be told this is the point where I thought the math was going to push me over
the edge and send me screaming from the apartment. Scrolling through the frequently asked questions page you find this:
"The large, main dunefield covers approximately 30 square miles, but
there are
many more square miles of smaller dunes in the sand sheet
surrounding the main
dunefield. At the widest point, the main dunefield
runs six miles and at the greatest
length, eight miles."
Oh, sure how the heck to do calculate that? There must be an easier answer so, back to
the Google! Bingo!!! Thank you once again Andrew Valdez! In his post on the park
website he answers just this question: 4.8 billion cubic meters.
Now I have all the information I need. All I have to do first is determine how many cubic inches there are in a 4.8 billion cubic meters of sand. Answer if I have converted correctly
1 cubic meter = 61,023.7 cubic inches
292,913,760,000,000 cubic inches
Dividing our cat litter box average into the above giant number gives us.....drum roll........
88,227,036,144.57831 Cat litter boxes that can be filled using the sand found at Great Sand Dunes.
HOWEVER, this is not accurate I don't think. Taking a quick poll of some cat loving friends of mine on Facebook this morning I found out that most of them put between 3-5 inches of litter in the bottom of the kitty box, so the above number might be a little small. I need a new average for the cubic volume of the cat litter box because the above number assumes we are filling the box to the TOP with sand. Adjusting the height of the cat litter boxes to be between 3-5 inches I redid the math. New volume average: 1,566.3 cubic inches. This means there is
187,007,852,901.743 Cat litter boxes worth of sand.
Ok, my head hurts from all this math I'm gonna go read a book.
If you happen to be a mathematician and determine that my answer it wrong PLEASE send the correct answer. I will not be offended after all I stink at math.