Square Kilometer
Symbol: km²Worldwide
What is a Square Kilometer (km²)?
The square kilometer (symbol: km²) is a metric unit of area equal to the area of a square with sides of one kilometer (1,000 meters). One square kilometer equals 1,000,000 square meters (10⁶ m²), 100 hectares, or approximately 0.3861 square miles. It is the standard unit for expressing large land areas such as cities, countries, lakes, and geographic regions.
Position in the Metric System
The square kilometer sits at the large end of the metric area scale. For context: a square centimeter measures a fingernail, a square meter measures a doorway, a hectare measures a farm field, and a square kilometer measures a neighborhood or small town. Countries and continents are measured in thousands or millions of square kilometers.
Relationship to the Hectare
One square kilometer equals exactly 100 hectares. Both units are widely used for land measurement, but they serve different scales: hectares for farms, parks, and estates (1-1,000 ha), and square kilometers for cities, regions, and countries (1-17,000,000 km²). The choice between them is purely one of convenience and readability.
Etymology
Compound Construction
The term "square kilometer" combines "square" (from Old French "esquarre," ultimately from Latin "exquadrare" — to make square) with "kilometer" (from Greek "khilioi" meaning thousand and "metron" meaning measure). The full term thus means "the area of a square measuring one thousand measures on each side."
Metric Prefix System
The prefix "kilo-" was adopted as part of the original French metric system in 1795. When applied to the meter, it creates the kilometer (1,000 m). When this unit is squared, it becomes the square kilometer (1,000,000 m²). The notation km² reflects the mathematical operation: (km)² = (1000 m)² = 1,000,000 m².
International Usage
The term translates directly across languages: French "kilomètre carré," German "Quadratkilometer," Spanish "kilómetro cuadrado," Russian "квадратный километр," Chinese "平方公里." The symbol km² is universal in scientific and technical writing worldwide.
Precise Definition
One square kilometer is defined as the area enclosed by a square with sides of exactly one kilometer (1,000 meters). This equals exactly 1,000,000 square meters or 100 hectares.
Precise Conversions
Key conversions: 1 km² = 1,000,000 m² = 100 ha = 10,000 ares = 10,000,000,000 cm². In imperial/US customary units: 1 km² ≈ 0.386102 mi² ≈ 247.105 acres ≈ 10,763,910 ft². Inversely: 1 mi² ≈ 2.58999 km², 1 acre ≈ 0.00404686 km².
Scaling Note
Because area scales as the square of length, doubling the side of a square quadruples its area. A 2 km × 2 km square is not 2 km² but 4 km². This quadratic relationship means that a country twice as wide and twice as long has four times the area — a principle that makes large geographic areas larger than intuition suggests.
History
Origins in the French Metric System
The square kilometer became available as a unit of area when the metric system was established in France in 1795, though it was not initially the preferred unit for land measurement. The French revolutionaries favored the are (100 m²) and hectare (10,000 m²) for practical land measurement. The square kilometer was treated as a mathematical derived unit — the square of the kilometer — rather than a named unit in its own right.
Cartographic Adoption
The square kilometer gained prominence through cartography and geography in the 19th century. As national mapping surveys adopted metric units, the square kilometer became the natural choice for expressing the areas of countries, provinces, lakes, and mountain ranges. The first accurate metric maps of France, produced by the Service géographique de l'armée in the mid-19th century, reported areas in square kilometers.
International Standardization
The Treaty of the Metre (1875) and subsequent international agreements promoted the square kilometer as the standard large-area unit. When the SI system was established in 1960, the square meter was designated the SI unit of area, with the square kilometer as a natural SI-prefixed multiple. Today, virtually all international geographic and statistical databases report country and regional areas in square kilometers.
Current Use
Geography and Statistics
The square kilometer is the universal unit for reporting country areas, regional boundaries, and geographic features. Russia spans 17,098,242 km², making it the world's largest country. The world's oceans cover approximately 361,132,000 km², and Earth's total surface area is about 510,072,000 km². Population density is expressed as people per square kilometer — from Monaco's 26,000/km² to Mongolia's 2/km².
Urban Planning
City areas and urban boundaries are measured in square kilometers. Greater Tokyo covers about 2,194 km², London about 1,572 km², and New York City about 783 km². Urban sprawl, suburban expansion, and metropolitan growth are tracked in square kilometers. Zoning maps and master plans use km² for district-level areas.
Environmental Science
Deforestation, desertification, glacier retreat, and habitat loss are reported in square kilometers. The Amazon rainforest covers approximately 5,500,000 km². Arctic sea ice extent, tracked by satellite, fluctuates between about 3,400,000 km² in September and 14,500,000 km² in March. These measurements are essential for climate change monitoring.
Everyday Use
Most people encounter square kilometers in news reports, geography lessons, and travel planning rather than daily measurements.
Country Comparisons
The square kilometer enables intuitive country comparisons. France (643,801 km²) is about the same size as Texas (695,662 km²). Japan (377,975 km²) is smaller than California (423,970 km²). The UK (242,495 km²) is about the same size as Oregon (255,026 km²). These comparisons help people grasp the scale of unfamiliar places.
City Scale
At the city level, a square kilometer is a walkable area — roughly 12-15 minutes to walk across. A dense urban neighborhood might fit in 1-2 km². Understanding this scale helps when reading about urban development or comparing cities.
Nature and Travel
National parks, nature reserves, and wilderness areas are described in square kilometers. Yellowstone covers about 8,991 km², Kruger National Park about 19,485 km², and the Sahara Desert about 9,200,000 km². Lake Baikal has a surface area of about 31,722 km² — roughly the size of Belgium.
In Science & Industry
Remote Sensing
Satellite-based Earth observation measures land cover, ice extent, ocean area, and atmospheric phenomena in square kilometers. Landsat imagery has a resolution of 30 meters per pixel, and each scene covers about 34,000 km². Global land-use databases like GlobCover map the entire Earth's surface at resolutions measured in fractions of a square kilometer.
Climate Science
Climate models grid the Earth's surface into cells measured in square kilometers. Current high-resolution models use cells of about 1-10 km on a side (1-100 km²). Carbon flux, rainfall, temperature, and other climate variables are calculated per grid cell and then aggregated to regional and global totals.
Ecology
In ecology, species distribution ranges and habitat areas are measured in square kilometers. The home range of a grizzly bear might be 200-600 km², while a wolf pack's territory covers 100-300 km². Conservation biology uses the species-area relationship, which predicts that habitat loss in square kilometers correlates with species extinction rates.
Geology and Planetary Science
Geological features — mountain ranges, river basins, volcanic calderas — are measured in square kilometers. The same unit applies to other planets: Mars has a surface area of about 144,798,500 km², and the Moon about 37,930,000 km². The Olympus Mons caldera on Mars measures about 3,000 km².
Interesting Facts
Russia is so vast (17,098,242 km²) that it spans 11 time zones and is larger than Pluto's surface area (16,650,000 km²).
The world's smallest country, Vatican City, has an area of just 0.44 km² — about 2,300 times smaller than a single square kilometer. Monaco is 2.02 km².
If all 8 billion people on Earth stood shoulder to shoulder, they would fit in about 800 km² — roughly the area of New York City.
The Amazon River basin covers approximately 7,050,000 km² — larger than the entire continent of Australia (7,688,000 km² excluding Antarctica).
Earth loses approximately 100,000 km² of forest per year (about the size of South Korea), though reforestation and natural regrowth partially offset this loss.
Antarctica's ice sheet covers about 14,000,000 km² and contains enough ice to raise global sea levels by about 58 meters if it all melted.
The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park covers 344,400 km² — an area larger than Italy — making it the largest living structure visible from space.
Lake Superior, the world's largest freshwater lake by surface area, covers 82,100 km² — larger than the Czech Republic (78,866 km²).
Regional Variations
Metric World
The square kilometer is used universally in all metric countries for large-area measurements. Country areas, regional statistics, and geographic data are reported in km² across Europe, Asia, Africa, South America, and Oceania.
United States
The US primarily uses the square mile (1 mi² ≈ 2.59 km²) for large area measurements. State areas, county boundaries, and geographic features are typically reported in square miles. However, scientific publications and international contexts use square kilometers.
United Kingdom
The UK uses both systems. Official statistics and scientific publications use square kilometers, but square miles persist in everyday usage and media reporting. The BBC might report a forest fire area in square miles for domestic audiences and square kilometers for international ones.
Aviation and Maritime
In aviation, airspace volumes and search areas are sometimes described in square nautical miles (1 NM² ≈ 3.43 km²). Maritime exclusive economic zones and fishing areas may also use square nautical miles, though international maritime law defines zones using nautical mile distances from coastlines.