A square pole, also known as a square perch, is an obsolete unit of land area measurement that was historically used in some English-speaking countries, including the United States and the United Kingdom. It is part of the older system of land measurement.
One square pole is equivalent to one square perch. In terms of modern measurements, one square pole is approximately equal to 25.29285264 square meters (m²) or 0.00625 acres.
As with other outdated units of land area measurement, the square pole is no longer commonly used in modern land transactions or legal documents. More standardized systems of measurement, such as square meters and square feet, have largely replaced these units.
A square mil (abbreviated as sq mil or mil²) is a unit of area measurement used primarily in the United States for very small areas, especially in the context of electrical engineering and wire gauge measurements. One square mil is equal to one square thousandth of an inch or one square mil (0.000001 square inches).
In terms of modern metric units, one square mil is approximately equal to 6.4516 square micrometers (µm²) because there are 25.4 micrometers in one thousandth of an inch (1 mil).
Square mils are often used when specifying the cross-sectional area of wires, particularly in electrical and electronic engineering. For example, the American Wire Gauge (AWG) system uses square mils to represent the cross-sectional area of wires, with smaller wire sizes having fewer square mils, and larger wire sizes having more square mils.