Convert Square Micrometer (µm²) to Township (township) instantly.
About these units
Square Micrometer (µm²)
A square micrometer, also called a square micron, equals 10⁻¹² square meters. It is a fundamental unit in microbiology, nanotechnology, semiconductor physics, and materials characterization. Cells, organelles, thin films, and laser spot sizes are frequently measured in µm². In semiconductor fabrication, transistor gates, nanoscale features, and photolithographic patterns often have areas measured at this scale. At such dimensions, quantum effects, crystal lattice structures, and electron mobility become important, making µm² not just a geometric unit but a bridge to fundamental physical behavior at microscopic scales.
Township (township)
A township, as used in the U.S. Public Land Survey System (PLSS), is an area equal to 36 square miles, arranged as a 6-mile × 6-mile square. It is a cornerstone unit of American land division, originating during the late 18th-century settlement of the American frontier. Townships standardized how land was surveyed and sold, allowing the federal government to systematically divide territory for settlement, homesteading, and revenue generation. They were subdivided into 36 sections, each one square mile in area. This grid-based system profoundly shaped American geography. Roads, property lines, agricultural fields, and county boundaries in much of the Midwest and West follow township geometry. Even today, PLSS townships remain legally relevant in land deeds, zoning regulations, and cadastral surveys.