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47 units available
6 categories total
To liters: multiply by 10⁶. To cubic meters: multiply by 1,000. To gallons (US): multiply by 264,172.
1 ML = 10⁶ L = 1,000 m³ = 1,000 kL. One gigaliter = 1,000 ML.
For example, 1 Megaliter (ML) = 0.000001 Cubic Kilometer (km³).
| Megaliter (ML) | Cubic Kilometer (km³) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 1.000000e-7 |
| 0.5 | 5.000000e-7 |
| 1 | 0.000001 |
| 2 | 0.000002 |
| 5 | 0.000005 |
| 10 | 0.00001 |
| 25 | 0.000025 |
| 50 | 0.00005 |
| 100 | 0.0001 |
| 500 | 0.0005 |
| 1000 | 0.001 |
The megaliter is a unit of volume equal to one million liters (10⁶ L), or 1,000 cubic meters.
1 ML = 10⁶ L = 1,000 m³ = 1,000 kL. One gigaliter = 1,000 ML.
To liters: multiply by 10⁶. To cubic meters: multiply by 1,000. To gallons (US): multiply by 264,172.
Municipal water supply reporting, reservoir levels, agricultural water allocation, and wastewater plant throughput.
An Olympic swimming pool holds 2.5 ML. A small town might use 1–5 ML of water per day.
Confusing ML (megaliter) with mL (milliliter) — they differ by a factor of 10⁹. Capitalization matters!
ML vs. mL: uppercase M = mega (million), lowercase m = milli (thousandth). Always check the case carefully.
The cubic kilometer is a unit of volume equal to a cube one kilometer on each side (10⁹ m³), used for extremely large volumes.
1 km³ = 10⁹ m³ = 10¹² L = 10¹⁵ mL. One cubic mile ≈ 4.168 km³.
To liters: multiply by 10¹². To cubic meters: multiply by 10⁹. To cubic miles: multiply by 0.23990.
Measuring lake volumes (Lake Baikal ≈ 23,615 km³), ice sheet volumes, and major reservoir capacities.
Earth's total ocean volume is about 1.335 billion km³. All human-made reservoirs combined hold only ~8,000 km³.
Underestimating the scale — 1 km³ = 10⁹ m³ = one trillion liters. It is a colossal volume.
Imagine a cube 1 km on each side — it would hold enough water to fill 400,000 Olympic swimming pools.



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