Cubic kilometer to Imperial teaspoon

km³

1 km³

imp tsp

168,936,382,689,999.94038654652299772218 imp tsp

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Quick Reference Table (Cubic kilometer to Imperial teaspoon)

Cubic kilometer (km³)Imperial teaspoon (imp tsp)
0.001168,936,382,689.99994038654652299772
0.011,689,363,826,899.99940386546522997722
0.116,893,638,268,999.99403865465229977222
1168,936,382,689,999.94038654652299772218
101,689,363,826,899,999.4038654652299772218
1,000168,936,382,689,999,940.38654652299772218011

About Cubic kilometer (km³)

A cubic kilometer (km³) is the volume of a cube with 1 km sides, equal to one trillion liters (10¹² L). It is used in geoscience, oceanography, glaciology, and climate science to express volumes of ice sheets, ocean basins, volcanic eruptions, and river discharge over long periods. The volume of Earth's oceans is approximately 1,335,000 km³. The Greenland ice sheet contains about 2,850,000 km³ of ice. Major volcanic eruptions are described by the dense rock equivalent (DRE) in km³.

Lake Superior holds about 12,100 km³ of water. A major explosive volcanic eruption might eject 1–1,000 km³ of material.

About Imperial teaspoon (imp tsp)

The imperial teaspoon is a unit of volume equal to approximately 5.919 milliliters, one third of an imperial tablespoon. It is larger than the US teaspoon (4.929 mL) and the metric teaspoon (5 mL). It appears in pre-metrication British and Commonwealth recipes. In medicine and pharmacology, both the UK and US have standardized on the 5 mL metric teaspoon for dosing, replacing all customary teaspoon sizes. Modern UK recipes do not use the imperial teaspoon.

Pre-metrication British recipes called for teaspoons of approximately 5.92 mL. A standard UK medicine teaspoon is now 5 mL (metric).


Cubic kilometer – Frequently Asked Questions

A cubic kilometer (km³) is the volume of a cube 1 km on each side, equal to one trillion liters or one billion cubic meters. It is the standard unit in geoscience for expressing planetary-scale volumes of water, ice, and magma.

Earth's oceans contain approximately 1,335,000 km³ of water. The world's total freshwater supply is about 35,000 km³, of which most (roughly 26,000 km³) is locked in glaciers and ice caps.

Volcanologists calculate eruption size as the Dense Rock Equivalent (DRE) in km³ — the volume of solid rock that would result if fragmented material were compressed. The 1815 Tambora eruption ejected roughly 160 km³ DRE, the largest in recorded history.

One cubic kilometer equals 1,000,000,000,000 liters (one trillion liters or one petaliter). It also equals 10⁹ m³ (one billion cubic meters).

The Greenland ice sheet contains approximately 2,850,000 km³ of ice. If fully melted, it would raise global sea level by about 7.2 meters. Annual ice loss from Greenland is measured in hundreds of km³ per year.

Imperial teaspoon – Frequently Asked Questions

One imperial teaspoon equals approximately 5.919 mL — slightly larger than the US teaspoon (4.929 mL) and the metric teaspoon (5 mL).

An imperial teaspoon is approximately 5.92 mL; a metric teaspoon is exactly 5 mL. The metric teaspoon is now standard in UK cooking, medicine, and pharmacology.

The imperial teaspoon is obsolete in modern UK, Australian, and Canadian cooking, which all use the 5 mL metric teaspoon. It may appear in cookbooks published before the 1970s metrication period.

A culinary pinch — the amount you can hold between thumb and forefinger — is roughly 0.3–0.5 mL, or about 1/16 of a teaspoon. Professional recipe developers have measured this and found surprising consistency across people: the human fingertip geometry constrains how much fine powder you can grip. A "dash" (liquid) is about 0.6 mL, and a "smidgen" is half a pinch (~0.15 mL). These folksy terms survive in recipes because they map to real, repeatable volumes — within the tolerance that salt and spice measurements actually require.

The WHO recommended the 5 mL metric teaspoon for medication dosing in the 1970s to eliminate ambiguity between imperial (5.92 mL), US (4.93 mL), and other teaspoon sizes. A calibrated 5 mL oral syringe is now the recommended tool for all liquid medicines.

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