Microgram to Ton (UK) Converter
Convert micrograms to long tons with our free online weight converter.
Quick Answer
1 Microgram = 9.842065e-13 long tons
Formula: Microgram × conversion factor = Ton (UK)
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
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Microgram to Ton (UK) Calculator
How to Use the Microgram to Ton (UK) Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Microgram).
- The converted value in Ton (UK) will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Weight category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Microgram to Ton (UK): Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Microgram to Ton (UK) involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Microgram = 9.84207e-13 long tonsExample Calculation:
Convert 5 micrograms: 5 × 9.84207e-13 = 4.92103e-12 long tons
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.
Need to convert to other weight units?
View all Weight conversions →What is a Microgram and a Ton (UK)?
A microgram (symbol: µg or mcg) is a unit of mass in the metric system equal to one millionth (1/1,000,000) of a gram, or one thousandth (1/1,000) of a milligram.
Key relationships:
- 1 microgram = 0.000001 grams (g)
- 1 microgram = 0.001 milligrams (mg)
- 1,000 micrograms = 1 milligram
- 1,000,000 micrograms = 1 gram
- 1 microgram ≈ 0.0000000353 ounces
Symbol variations:
- µg: Standard scientific symbol (µ = Greek letter mu)
- mcg: Common in medicine/pharmacy (avoids confusion if µ looks like m)
- Both mean exactly the same thing
The prefix "micro-":
- From Greek "mikrós" meaning "small"
- SI prefix denoting 10⁻⁶ (one millionth)
- Also used in: micrometer (µm), microsecond (µs), microliter (µL)
In perspective (how small is it?):
- 1 grain of table salt ≈ 1,000 µg (1 mg)
- 1 speck of dust ≈ 1-10 µg
- Human red blood cell ≈ 100 µg
- A typical dose of Vitamin B12 ≈ 2.4 µg
⚠️ CRITICAL SAFETY WARNING: Never confuse µg (microgram) with mg (milligram). Taking 1 mg when prescribed 1 µg = 1,000x overdose! Always double-check labels and prescriptions.
The long ton (also called imperial ton or UK ton) is a unit of mass in the British Imperial system, officially defined as:
1 long ton = 2,240 pounds (lb) = 1,016.0469088 kilograms (kg)
Historical Definition
The long ton is based on the Imperial system's hundredweight (cwt):
1 long ton = 20 hundredweight (cwt)
- 1 hundredweight (Imperial) = 112 pounds
- 20 × 112 lb = 2,240 pounds
This contrasts with the US system:
- US hundredweight = 100 pounds
- US short ton = 20 US hundredweight = 2,000 pounds
The Three "Tons" Compared
| Ton Type | Weight in Pounds | Weight in Kilograms | Where Used | |----------|------------------|---------------------|------------| | Long Ton (UK/Imperial) | 2,240 lb | 1,016.047 kg | UK, Commonwealth (historic), naval displacement | | Short Ton (US) | 2,000 lb | 907.185 kg | United States, North America | | Metric Ton/Tonne | 2,204.62 lb | 1,000 kg (exactly) | International standard (SI-compatible) |
Difference Summary:
- Long ton vs. short ton: 240 lbs (10.9% difference)
- Long ton vs. metric tonne: ~16 kg (1.6% difference)
- Short ton vs. metric tonne: ~93 kg (10.2% difference)
Why "Long" Ton?
The term "long ton" emerged in the early 20th century to distinguish the British imperial ton (2,240 lbs) from the American "short ton" (2,000 lbs). Before this, "ton" simply meant the local standard:
- In Britain and the Empire: ton = 2,240 lbs (now called "long ton")
- In the United States: ton = 2,000 lbs (now called "short ton")
International trade requiring clarity led to the qualifying adjectives "long" and "short."
Note: The Microgram is part of the metric (SI) system, primarily used globally in science and trade. The Ton (UK) belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Microgram and Ton (UK)
-
Metric System Origins: The microgram is derived from the gram, a base unit in the early metric system defined in the late 18th century during the French Revolution (1790s).
-
Prefix Development: The prefix "micro-" (symbol: µ) was formalized in the late 19th century as part of the systematic development of metric prefixes to indicate a factor of 10⁻⁶ (one millionth).
-
Scientific Need: As analytical chemistry and biology advanced in the 19th and early 20th centuries, scientists needed to measure increasingly smaller masses - leading to widespread adoption of the microgram.
-
Pharmaceutical Revolution: The microgram became critically important in the 20th century with:
- Development of potent hormones (thyroid, insulin)
- Discovery of vitamins requiring trace amounts
- Creation of modern pharmaceuticals with precise dosing
- Antibiotics and specialized medications
-
Vitamin Discovery Era (1910s-1940s):
- Scientists discovered vitamins needed in microgram quantities
- Vitamin B12, biotin, folate measured in µg
- Nutrition labels began using micrograms
- Public health campaigns addressed micronutrient deficiencies
-
Symbol Standardization:
- µg adopted as standard scientific notation
- mcg introduced in medical settings to prevent confusion (µ can look like m if handwritten poorly)
- Both symbols officially recognized and equivalent
-
Modern Usage: Today, micrograms are essential in:
- Pharmaceutical dosing (especially endocrinology)
- Nutritional labeling (vitamins, minerals)
- Environmental monitoring (air/water quality)
- Toxicology and forensic science
- Analytical chemistry (trace analysis)
of the Long Ton
Medieval Origins: The Tun (c. 1200-1500)
The Wine Trade:
- The word "ton" derives from "tun" (Old English tunne, Middle English tonne), meaning a large cask or barrel
- A tun was a standard wine cask in medieval England holding approximately 252 wine gallons (~954 liters, 210 Imperial gallons)
- When filled with wine, a tun weighed roughly 2,240 pounds, establishing the weight association
Early Standardization Attempts:
- 13th-14th centuries: English merchants used "ton" for both volume (liquids) and weight (bulk goods)
- Different commodities had varying ton definitions:
- Wool ton: Weight needed to fill shipping space (variable)
- Coal ton: Weight-based measurement
- Freight ton: Volume-based (40 cubic feet)
The Problem of Multiple Tons:
- Confusion in trade due to inconsistent ton definitions
- Disputes over cargo weight vs. volume
- Regional variations across England and continental Europe
Standardization: The Weights and Measures Act of 1824
Imperial System Codification:
- 1824: British Parliament passed the Weights and Measures Act under King George IV
- Unified and standardized British weights and measures across the Empire
- Officially defined the imperial ton as 2,240 pounds
- Based on existing practice: 20 hundredweight of 112 pounds each
Why 2,240 Pounds? The choice reflected established commercial practice:
- 1 hundredweight (cwt) = 112 pounds (8 stones × 14 pounds)
- 20 hundredweight = 2,240 pounds
- This matched the traditional weight of a tun of wine
- Integrated with existing Imperial units (stones, pounds, ounces)
Imperial Hundredweight System:
- 1 stone = 14 pounds
- 1 hundredweight = 8 stones = 112 pounds
- 1 ton = 20 hundredweight = 160 stones = 2,240 pounds
British Empire and Global Commerce (1824-1945)
Dominance of British Shipping:
- 19th century: Britain controlled ~60-70% of world merchant shipping tonnage
- British shipping companies used long tons for:
- Cargo capacity (deadweight tonnage)
- Ship displacement (weight of water displaced)
- Freight charges (cost per ton)
The Coal Trade:
- British coal powered the Industrial Revolution
- Coal universally measured in long tons
- Newcastle coal trade: Millions of long tons exported annually
- Coal exports to Europe, Americas, Asia all priced in long tons
Naval Architecture:
- Displacement tonnage: Weight of water displaced by a floating ship, measured in long tons
- Used to classify warship size: "10,000-ton cruiser," "50,000-ton battleship"
- Standard in Royal Navy and Commonwealth navies
- Example: HMS Dreadnought (1906): ~18,000 long tons displacement
Imperial Commodity Trade:
- Iron and steel: British iron production measured in long tons
- Grain: Commonwealth grain shipments (wheat, barley) in long tons
- Rubber, cotton, wool: Plantation exports measured in long tons
- Freight rates: Shipping costs typically £X per long ton
Global Adoption:
- British commercial dominance spread long ton usage
- Bills of lading (shipping documents) in long tons
- Maritime insurance: Cargo value calculated per long ton
- Port records: Cargo throughput recorded in long tons
American Divergence: The Short Ton
US Measurement Evolution:
- Early America inherited British Imperial units
- By mid-19th century, US customary system diverged
- Americans adopted a 100-pound hundredweight (simpler decimal-friendly base)
- US ton = 20 US hundredweight = 20 × 100 lb = 2,000 pounds (the "short ton")
Why the Difference?
- Simplicity: 100-pound hundredweight easier for calculation
- Independence: Post-colonial desire for distinct American standards
- Internal trade: US domestic commerce didn't require British compatibility
Terminology:
- Originally, both were simply called "ton" in their respective countries
- Early 20th century: International trade necessitated distinction
- British ton → "long ton"
- American ton → "short ton"
The Rise of the Metric Tonne (1875-Present)
Metric System Development:
- 1875: Metric Convention established international metric standards
- Metric tonne (or ton) defined as 1,000 kilograms (exactly)
- Decimal-based, simple, scientifically rational
Advantages Over Long/Short Tons:
- Exact decimal definition: 1 tonne = 1,000 kg (no fractions)
- Universal: Not tied to any national system
- SI-compatible: Integrates with scientific units
- Easier calculation: Decimal arithmetic vs. 2,240-pound conversions
Global Metrication Wave (1960s-1990s):
United Kingdom:
- 1965: UK government announced metrication program
- 1970s-1980s: Gradual transition in trade, industry, and commerce
- 1995: Most commercial transactions legally required to use metric units
- Long ton legacy: Persists in road signs (distances/heights) and some traditional contexts
Commonwealth Nations:
- Australia: Metrication 1970s, completed by 1988
- Canada: Metrication 1970s, officially adopted 1977-1980
- New Zealand: Metrication 1969-1976
- India: Adopted metric system post-independence (1947-1960s)
- South Africa: Metrication 1970s
Shipping and Maritime:
- International Maritime Organization (IMO): Encouraged metric units
- Modern cargo manifests typically in metric tonnes
- Shipping contracts, freight rates increasingly metric
Contemporary Usage (1990s-Present)
Where the Long Ton Survives:
1. Naval Displacement (UK and Commonwealth):
- Royal Navy still reports warship displacement in long tons (alongside metric)
- Royal Australian Navy, Royal Canadian Navy, Royal New Zealand Navy: Use long tons traditionally
- Example: HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier: ~65,000 long tons full load displacement
2. Historical Records:
- Pre-1990s British commercial records in long tons
- Archival shipping manifests, trade statistics, industrial production data
- Converting historical data requires long ton knowledge
3. Certain Industries:
- Some maritime insurance policies reference long tons in older contracts
- Vintage engineering specifications (bridges, railways built pre-metrication)
- Mining records: Historical coal, iron ore output
4. United States Context:
- When Americans refer to British/Commonwealth historical data, they may encounter long tons
- Rare in modern US usage (Americans use short tons domestically)
Gradual Obsolescence:
- Most modern international trade: metric tonnes
- Younger generations in UK/Commonwealth unfamiliar with long tons
- Likely to become purely historical unit within decades
Common Uses and Applications: micrograms vs long tons
Explore the typical applications for both Microgram (metric) and Ton (UK) (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for micrograms
The microgram is essential for measuring extremely small quantities across multiple fields:
Medicine & Pharmaceuticals
Measuring dosages of potent medications and hormones where milligrams would be too large a unit. Critical for endocrinology, psychiatry, and specialized therapeutics.
Why micrograms matter:
- Potent drugs have narrow therapeutic windows
- Prevents overdose from rounding errors
- Allows fine-tuning of hormone replacement
- Essential for pediatric dosing
Common medications in µg:
- Thyroid hormones (25-200 µg)
- Birth control (15-35 µg estrogen)
- Vitamin B12 supplements (100-1,000 µg)
- Folic acid (400-800 µg)
- Digoxin (62.5-250 µg)
⚠️ Safety: Pharmacists use mcg (not µg) on prescriptions to prevent µ being misread as m.
Convert medication doses: µg to mg | mg to µg
Nutrition
Specifying amounts of trace minerals and vitamins in food, especially those needed in very small quantities but essential for health.
Nutrients measured in µg:
- Vitamin B12 (2.4 µg/day)
- Vitamin D (10-20 µg/day)
- Vitamin K (90-120 µg/day)
- Folate (400 µg/day)
- Selenium (55 µg/day)
- Biotin (30 µg/day)
Why µg for nutrition:
- Daily requirements are very small
- Prevents decimal errors (easier than 0.0024 g)
- International standard for supplement labeling
- Matches medical terminology
Food Fortification:
- Breakfast cereals: Fortified with µg amounts of B vitamins
- Milk: Vitamin D added in µg
- Salt: Iodine fortification (45-100 µg per gram of salt)
Chemistry & Biology
Quantifying trace amounts of substances in experiments, especially in analytical chemistry, biochemistry, and molecular biology.
Laboratory Applications:
- Sample preparation: Weighing µg of rare compounds
- Protein quantification: Bradford/BCA assays use µg protein
- DNA/RNA: Quantified in µg for PCR, sequencing
- HPLC/GC: Injection standards in µg amounts
- Mass spectrometry: Detection at µg to pg levels
Biochemical Standards:
- Enzyme activity: Units per µg protein
- Cell culture: Growth factors at 1-100 µg/mL
- Antibody concentration: Often µg/mL
Environmental Science
Measuring concentrations of pollutants or contaminants in air, water, and soil at parts-per-million (ppm) or parts-per-billion (ppb) levels.
Environmental Monitoring:
-
Air quality: µg/m³ (micrograms per cubic meter)
- PM2.5 particulates
- Heavy metals (lead, mercury)
- Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
-
Water quality: µg/L (micrograms per liter = ppb)
- Arsenic, lead, mercury in drinking water
- Pesticide residues
- Pharmaceutical contaminants
- Microplastics
-
Soil contamination: µg/kg (micrograms per kilogram = ppb)
- Heavy metal contamination
- Persistent organic pollutants
Regulatory Standards:
- EPA sets limits in µg/m³ or µg/L
- WHO guidelines use µg measurements
- EU environmental regulations
Toxicology and Forensics
Measuring extremely small amounts of toxic substances, drugs, or poisons in biological samples.
Forensic Toxicology:
- Blood drug levels (µg/L)
- Urine drug screening (µg/mL)
- Hair analysis (µg/mg hair)
- Tissue samples (µg/g tissue)
Clinical Toxicology:
- Heavy metal poisoning (blood lead: µg/dL)
- Drug overdose assessment
- Therapeutic drug monitoring
- Poison detection
Detection Limits:
- Modern instruments: Can detect picograms (0.001 µg)
- High sensitivity needed for trace toxins
Research and Development
Pharmaceutical R&D, materials science, and nanotechnology use micrograms for:
- Drug formulation studies
- Nanoparticle synthesis
- Catalyst development
- Biosensor fabrication
- Quality control testing
Use our weight converter for scientific conversions.
When to Use long tons
of the Long Ton in Modern Contexts
1. Naval and Maritime History
Researchers, naval historians, and museum curators working with historical ships and maritime records must understand long tons:
- Ship specifications: Displacement, cargo capacity, fuel capacity
- Archival documents: Shipping manifests, port records, naval reports
- Comparative analysis: Comparing historical ships to modern vessels
- Museum exhibits: HMS Victory, USS Constitution, RMS Titanic displays
Example: Understanding that HMS Hood's 42,000 long ton displacement = ~42,672 metric tonnes helps compare to modern carriers.
2. Royal Navy and Commonwealth Navies
British and Commonwealth naval forces still reference long tons:
- Official displacement figures: Warships listed in long tons (with metric equivalent)
- Naval doctrine: Historical continuity in naval architecture
- Training: Naval officers learn both systems
- Public relations: Press releases may include long ton figures for tradition
Modern Practice: Usually list both: "HMS Queen Elizabeth: 65,000 long tons (66,000 tonnes)"
3. Historical Research and Archives
Historians studying British Empire, Industrial Revolution, or maritime trade encounter long tons constantly:
- Economic history: Production statistics (coal, iron, steel, ships)
- Trade records: Import/export volumes
- Infrastructure: Railway freight, canal cargo
- Colonial economies: Plantation outputs (sugar, rubber, cotton)
Conversion Necessity: Comparing 19th-century British data (long tons) with modern data (metric tonnes) requires accurate conversion.
4. Vintage Engineering and Restoration
Engineers working with historic structures, machinery, or vehicles:
- Bridge load ratings: Victorian bridges specified in long tons
- Crane capacities: Historic cranes rated in long tons
- Railway heritage: Steam locomotives, heritage railways use long tons
- Industrial archaeology: Historic factories, mines with long ton specifications
Safety: Modern safety assessments must convert long ton ratings to metric.
5. Commodity Markets and Legal Documents
Occasionally, older contracts or legal documents reference long tons:
- Mining leases: Historic coal, iron ore extraction rights
- Shipping contracts: Old freight agreements still in force
- Insurance policies: Maritime insurance with long ton clauses
- Property deeds: Historical rights to extract/transport X long tons
Legal interpretation: Courts may need to convert long tons for enforcement.
6. Education and Reference
Students and general public encounter long tons in:
- History textbooks: British industrial production, maritime trade
- War histories: Shipping losses, munitions production
- Biographies: Figures like Brunel (engineering), Nelson (naval)
- Documentaries: Maritime history, industrial heritage
Confusion: Many confuse long ton, short ton, metric tonne without understanding differences.
7. International Trade (Rare, Legacy Contexts)
Very occasionally, long tons appear in:
- UK-Commonwealth trade: Older business relationships honoring traditional units
- Specific commodities: Niche markets with historical ties
- Contracts: Long-standing agreements referencing long tons
Trend: Rapidly disappearing as metrication completes and older contracts expire.
Additional Unit Information
About Microgram (µg)
How many micrograms are in a milligram?
There are 1,000 micrograms (µg) in 1 milligram (mg).
Conversion:
- 1 mg = 1,000 µg
- To convert mg to µg: multiply by 1,000
- To convert µg to mg: divide by 1,000
Examples:
- 0.5 mg = 500 µg
- 1.5 mg = 1,500 µg
- 0.025 mg = 25 µg
- 10 mg = 10,000 µg
Memory aid: "Milli" is bigger than "micro" - mg is 1,000 times larger than µg.
Use our mg to µg converter for instant conversions.
How many micrograms are in a gram?
There are 1,000,000 micrograms (µg) in 1 gram (g).
Calculation: 1 g = 1,000 mg, and 1 mg = 1,000 µg, therefore: 1 g = 1,000 × 1,000 µg = 1,000,000 µg
Conversion:
- 1 g = 1,000,000 µg
- To convert g to µg: multiply by 1,000,000
- To convert µg to g: divide by 1,000,000
Examples:
- 0.001 g = 1,000 µg
- 0.01 g = 10,000 µg
- 0.1 g = 100,000 µg
- 1 g = 1,000,000 µg
Perspective: A grain of salt (~1 mg) contains ~1,000 µg.
What is the symbol for microgram?
The standard symbol is µg (using the Greek letter µ, pronounced "mu").
Alternative symbol: mcg (used especially in medical contexts)
Why two symbols?:
- µg: Standard scientific notation, internationally recognized
- mcg: Safer in medical prescriptions - prevents µ being misread as m
- Both mean exactly the same thing: 1 µg = 1 mcg
Safety issue:
- Handwritten µ can look like m
- "µg" misread as "mg" = 1,000x dosing error
- Medical professionals prefer "mcg" to prevent fatal errors
How to type µ:
- Mac: Option + M
- Windows: Alt + 230
- Or just type "mcg" in medical contexts
Is µg the same as mcg?
Yes! µg and mcg mean exactly the same thing.
- µg: Microgram (using Greek letter µ)
- mcg: Microgram (using letters m-c-g)
- Both = 0.001 mg = 0.000001 g
Why both exist?:
- µg: Standard in science, chemistry, environmental science
- mcg: Preferred in medicine/pharmacy for safety
- Prevents µ being misread as m (which would be mg)
Where you'll see each:
- µg: Scientific papers, environmental reports, lab results
- mcg: Prescription bottles, medical records, pharmacy labels
- Both: Nutrition labels (may show either or both)
Important: Always verify which unit - never assume!
How much is 1 microgram visually?
1 microgram is EXTREMELY small - too small to see with the naked eye.
Visual comparisons:
- 1,000 µg = 1 mg = 1 grain of table salt
- 100 µg = Approximate weight of a human red blood cell
- 10 µg = Large grain of pollen
- 1 µg = Small speck of dust
Perspective:
- 1 paperclip ≈ 1,000,000 µg (1 gram)
- 1 grain of salt ≈ 1,000 µg (1 mg)
- 1 eyelash ≈ 10-100 µg
- 1 human hair (1 cm) ≈ 60-90 µg
For medication:
- A typical Vitamin B12 tablet (1,000 µg) looks like any small pill
- The active ingredient weighs 1 mg
- The rest is filler/binder
You cannot "see" individual micrograms - you need a precision scale to measure them accurately.
What medications are dosed in micrograms?
Many potent medications use microgram dosing:
Thyroid Hormones (most common):
- Levothyroxine: 25-200 µg
- Liothyronine: 5-50 µg
Hormonal Medications:
- Birth control pills: 15-35 µg estrogen
- Testosterone: Some formulations
Cardiovascular:
- Digoxin: 62.5-250 µg
- Clonidine: 100-600 µg
Pain Management:
- Fentanyl: Patches deliver µg/hour
- (Fentanyl is EXTREMELY potent - µg doses)
Vitamins (technically supplements):
- Vitamin B12: 100-5,000 µg
- Vitamin D: 10-125 µg (400-5,000 IU)
- Folate: 400-800 µg
- Biotin: 30-10,000 µg
Why micrograms?:
- Very potent drugs need small doses
- Narrow therapeutic window
- Prevents overdose from measurement errors
⚠️ Safety: These medications have microgram-level dosing precisely because they're potent. Never adjust dose without medical supervision.
How do I measure micrograms at home?
Short answer: You generally CAN'T and SHOULDN'T measure micrograms at home.
Why not?:
- Kitchen scales: Accurate to 1 gram (1,000,000 µg) - NOT precise enough
- Jewelry scales: Accurate to 0.01-0.1 g (10,000-100,000 µg) - still not precise
- Milligram scales: Accurate to 1 mg (1,000 µg) - closer but not µg-level
- Microgram precision: Requires laboratory analytical balance ($1,000-$10,000)
For Medications:
- ✅ Use pre-measured tablets/capsules - safest option
- ✅ Follow prescription exactly - don't compound at home
- ✅ Liquid medications: Use provided dropper/syringe
- ❌ Never try to measure powder medications at home
For Supplements:
- Buy pre-dosed pills (e.g., 1,000 µg B12 tablets)
- Use products with certified dosing
- Don't buy raw powder unless you're a lab
If you need microgram precision:
- Laboratory analytical balance required
- Calibrated weights for accuracy
- Controlled environment (no air currents)
- Cost: $1,000+ for quality balance
Safety warning: ⚠️ For medications, NEVER attempt home measurement. Fatal dosing errors possible. Always use professionally prepared medications.
What's the difference between µg/mL and mg/L?
They are exactly the same!
µg/mL = mg/L (both equal parts per million in water)
Why?:
- 1 mL = 0.001 L (or 1 L = 1,000 mL)
- 1 mg = 1,000 µg
- Therefore: 1 mg/L = 1,000 µg/1,000 mL = 1 µg/mL
Examples:
- Lead in water: 15 µg/L = 0.015 mg/L
- Drug concentration: 100 µg/mL = 100 mg/L
- Vitamin solution: 50 µg/mL = 50 mg/L
Common uses:
- µg/mL: Laboratory concentrations, drug solutions
- mg/L: Environmental standards, water quality
- Both: Used interchangeably depending on field
Parts per million (ppm):
- In water: 1 ppm = 1 mg/L = 1 µg/mL
- In air: 1 ppm is different (depends on molecular weight)
How many IU is a microgram?
It depends on which vitamin! IU (International Units) convert differently for each substance.
Vitamin D (most common):
- 1 µg = 40 IU
- 1 IU = 0.025 µg
Common Vitamin D conversions:
- 400 IU = 10 µg
- 800 IU = 20 µg
- 1,000 IU = 25 µg
- 2,000 IU = 50 µg
- 5,000 IU = 125 µg
Vitamin A (retinol):
- 1 IU ≈ 0.3 µg retinol
- 1 µg retinol ≈ 3.33 IU
Vitamin E (α-tocopherol):
- 1 IU ≈ 0.67 mg α-tocopherol
- (Note: mg not µg for Vitamin E!)
Why different?:
- IU measures biological activity, not mass
- Each vitamin has different potency
- Historical measurement system
- Modern labels often show both µg and IU
Tip: Check supplement labels - most show both µg and IU for clarity.
What is µg/dL in blood tests?
µg/dL = micrograms per deciliter - commonly used in blood test results.
What it means:
- Concentration of a substance in blood
- 1 dL = 100 mL (1 deciliter = 10th of a liter)
- µg/dL tells you: micrograms per 100 milliliters of blood
Common blood tests using µg/dL:
Blood Lead Level:
- Normal: <5 µg/dL
- Elevated: 5-10 µg/dL
- High: >10 µg/dL (concern)
- Toxic: >45 µg/dL
Blood Glucose (note: mg/dL, not µg/dL):
- Normal fasting: 70-100 mg/dL
- (This is milligrams, not micrograms!)
Iron/Ferritin: Sometimes reported in µg/dL Vitamin B12: Often ng/mL or pg/mL (nanograms/picograms)
Conversion:
- 1 µg/dL = 10 µg/L
- 1 µg/dL = 0.01 mg/L
- 1 µg/dL = 10 ng/mL
Clinical significance:
- Reference ranges vary by lab
- Always check lab's normal range
- Consult healthcare provider for interpretation
Note: µg/dL is different from µg/mL:
- 1 µg/dL = 0.01 µg/mL (100 times smaller)
About Ton (UK) (long ton)
1. How many pounds are in a UK Ton (Long Ton)?
There are exactly 2,240 pounds in 1 UK long ton. This derives from the Imperial system's definition: 1 long ton = 20 hundredweight, and 1 Imperial hundredweight = 112 pounds, so 20 × 112 = 2,240 pounds. This standard was codified in the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824 and became the official weight unit across the British Empire for shipping, coal trade, and bulk commodities. The 2,240-pound long ton originated from the traditional weight of a "tun" (large wine cask) when filled, which medieval merchants found convenient for maritime commerce. Today, while largely replaced by metric tonnes in most contexts, the 2,240-pound definition remains unchanged in the few areas where long tons are still used, particularly Royal Navy ship displacement measurements.
2. Is a UK Ton larger than a US Ton?
Yes, a UK long ton (2,240 lb / 1,016 kg) is 12% larger than a US short ton (2,000 lb / 907 kg)—specifically, 240 pounds heavier. This difference arose because the UK retained the traditional 112-pound Imperial hundredweight (20 cwt = 2,240 lb), while the US adopted a simplified 100-pound hundredweight (20 cwt = 2,000 lb) in the 19th century. The 12% difference is significant in large-scale commerce: 10,000 US short tons = 8,929 UK long tons (a shortfall of 1,071 long tons). This discrepancy caused confusion in transatlantic trade, requiring contracts to specify "long tons" or "short tons" explicitly. The metric tonne (1,000 kg) was partly adopted internationally to eliminate this Anglo-American ambiguity, being nearly equal to the long ton (1.6% lighter) but defined in the universal decimal system.
3. How does the UK Ton compare to the metric ton?
A UK long ton (1,016.047 kg) is 1.6% heavier than a metric tonne (1,000 kg)—specifically, ~16 kg or ~35 pounds heavier. This near-equivalence made conversion relatively straightforward during metrication: 1 long ton ≈ 1.016 tonnes, and 1 tonne ≈ 0.984 long tons. For rough estimates, many treated them as approximately equal, but precision trade required exact conversion (error of 1.6% matters for large shipments). Example: 100,000 long tons = 101,605 metric tonnes (1,605-tonne difference). The metric tonne's advantage: exact decimal definition (1,000 kg) integrates seamlessly with SI units, whereas the long ton (2,240 lbs, odd historical number) requires complex conversions. Despite metrication, some UK contexts preserve long tons: Royal Navy still reports ship displacement in long tons alongside metric figures, maintaining centuries of naval tradition.
4. Why did Britain use 2,240 pounds instead of a round number?
The 2,240-pound definition arose organically from medieval commerce, not rational design. It derives from the Imperial hundredweight system: 1 cwt = 8 stones = 8 × 14 lbs = 112 pounds. Twenty hundredweight = 20 × 112 = 2,240 pounds. This system was based on stones (14 lbs, traditional for weighing people and goods) rather than decimal convenience. Additionally, the "tun" (wine cask) traditionally weighed ~2,240 lbs when full, reinforcing this standard. When the Weights and Measures Act of 1824 standardized British units, lawmakers codified existing practice rather than inventing new decimal-friendly numbers. Result: An Imperial system built on 14s, 16s, 112s, and 2,240s—functional but mathematically awkward compared to the metric system's base-10 simplicity. This complexity was a major driver of global metrication in the 20th century, as decimal systems (1,000 kg tonne) are far easier for calculation and international trade.
5. Do modern British ships still use long tons?
Yes, but with caveats. The Royal Navy still officially reports warship displacement in long tons alongside metric tonnes, preserving centuries of naval tradition. Example: HMS Queen Elizabeth (2017) is listed as 65,000 long tons (~66,000 tonnes) displacement. However, merchant shipping has almost entirely switched to metric tonnes following international maritime conventions and UK metrication (1965-1990s). Modern cargo ships, tankers, and container vessels specify capacity in metric tonnes (deadweight tonnage, cargo capacity). Engineering calculations, fuel consumption, and port documentation now use metric. The Royal Navy's continued use of long tons is primarily ceremonial and historical—engineers work in metric internally, but public-facing documents honor tradition. Most Commonwealth navies (Australia, Canada, New Zealand) similarly list both units. Prediction: As older naval officers retire, long tons may eventually disappear even from Royal Navy specifications, becoming purely a historical footnote.
6. When did the UK stop using long tons officially?
The UK's transition was gradual, not instantaneous: 1965: Government announced metrication program. 1970s-1980s: Industries progressively adopted metric units. 1995: Metrication of trade largely complete; the Weights and Measures Act 1985 required most goods sold by weight to use metric. However, "official" cessation is complex: Some sectors retain long tons (e.g., Royal Navy). Road signs still use miles (not metric). Pubs serve pints (568 ml, not 500 ml metric). Thus, metrication was incomplete: "soft" metrication allowed dual units. By the late 1990s-2000s, most commerce, manufacturing, and shipping had switched to metric tonnes, making long tons rare outside specific legacy contexts. Practically, long tons ceased being the default standard around 1990-2000, but they never disappeared entirely. Older Britons still think in stones/pounds for body weight, and tonnes sometimes mentally convert to long tons. Full cultural shift may take another generation.
7. What's the difference between a long ton and a freight ton?
Long ton and freight ton (also called measurement ton) measure different things: Long ton: Unit of weight = 2,240 pounds (1,016 kg). Freight ton (measurement ton): Unit of volume = 40 cubic feet (~1.133 cubic meters). Shipping charges historically used whichever gave the higher value: weight or volume. Why? Some cargo is dense and heavy (iron ore, coal): charged by weight (long tons). Other cargo is bulky but light (cotton bales, furniture): charged by volume (freight tons). Example: 1,000 cubic feet of cotton = 25 freight tons (1,000 ÷ 40). If it weighs only 10,000 lbs = 4.46 long tons, ship charges for 25 freight tons (higher). Conversely, 1,000 cubic feet of lead = 25 freight tons. If it weighs 70,000 lbs = 31.25 long tons, ship charges for 31.25 long tons (higher). This "weight or measurement, whichever greater" rule persists in modern shipping (now using metric tonnes and cubic meters, but same principle).
8. How did metrication affect industries that relied on long tons?
Metrication required massive reengineering, retraining, and record conversion: Coal mining: Decades of production data in long tons had to be converted for comparisons. Miners trained to think in long tons had to learn metric. Modern equipment calibrated in tonnes. Shipping: Bills of lading, cargo manifests, freight rates all converted to metric tonnes. Crane capacities, ship specifications re-rated. Steel industry: Furnace capacities, production targets, quality standards converted. Historical production comparisons required conversion factors. Agriculture: Grain yields (tons per acre → tonnes per hectare), livestock weights, feed quantities. Challenges: Elderly workers unfamiliar with metric. "Rounding errors" in conversion causing disputes (1,000 long tons ≠ 1,000 tonnes). Cost of replacing scales, signage, documentation. Benefits: International trade simplified (no long ton/short ton confusion). Decimal calculations easier. Integration with scientific/engineering standards. Transition pain: 1970s-1990s saw dual labeling, calculation errors, generational confusion. By 2000s, mostly smooth, but legacy long ton data remains in archives requiring ongoing conversion skills.
9. Why do some sources say "ton" while others say "tonne"?
The spelling distinguishes metric from non-metric: "Ton" (t-o-n): Generic term, historically means long ton (UK), short ton (US), or any ton. "Tonne" (t-o-n-n-e): Specifically refers to metric ton (1,000 kg). Also written "metric ton." The extra "ne" distinguishes it. Usage: British English: Often use "tonne" for metric, "ton" for Imperial/US. American English: Usually "ton" for short ton (domestic), "metric ton" (not "tonne") for 1,000 kg. International standards: SI prefers "tonne" for 1,000 kg to avoid confusion. Pronunciation: Both pronounced identically in English (sounds like "tun"). In practice: Context usually clarifies, but precise technical writing specifies: "long ton," "short ton," "metric tonne" (or "metric ton"). Ambiguity persists: A British naval historian might write "50,000 tons" meaning long tons, while a modern cargo manifest "50,000 tonnes" means metric. Recommendation: Always specify unit explicitly in technical contexts to prevent costly errors.
10. Can I still buy things by the long ton in the UK?
Legally: No, almost impossible. The Weights and Measures Act 1985 and subsequent regulations require most goods sold by weight to use metric units (kilograms, grams, tonnes). Imperial units can be supplementary (dual labeling), but metric must be primary. Violations result in fines. Exceptions: Some traditional items (loose goods in markets) tolerated Imperial informally, but legally must be metric. Practically: No modern British shop, supplier, or merchant sells bulk commodities by the long ton. Everything is tonnes (metric): coal (if still sold for heating, rare), aggregates (gravel, sand), scrap metal, agricultural products. Why?: Suppliers, scales, invoices, and logistics all metric. Even older Britons who remember long tons accept metric in commercial contexts. Historical context: Pre-1970s, coal merchants delivered "1 ton of coal" (long ton) to homes. Now, heating oil sold in litres, firewood in cubic meters. Legacy: Long tons only appear in historical records, naval references, vintage engineering specs—not retail or commerce.
11. What industries were most resistant to abandoning the long ton?
Shipping and maritime industries were most resistant, for several reasons: 1. International standardization concerns: Shipping was already internationalized; changing units required global coordination. Royal Navy and Commonwealth navies valued continuity of displacement measurements across centuries for comparing ship classes. 2. Existing infrastructure: Shipyards, cranes, dry docks all rated in long tons. Re-rating everything expensive. 3. Cultural tradition: "Tonnage" terminology deeply embedded in maritime law, insurance, and practice. Changing felt like severing heritage. 4. Training: Mariners, naval architects, shipbuilders trained in long tons for entire careers. Coal industry also resisted: Miners, colliery managers, and coal merchants used long tons for generations. Production targets, wage calculations, and rail freight all based on long tons. However, resistance eventually failed: Economic necessity (international trade efficiency) and generational change (younger workers learned metric in school) gradually shifted all industries. By 2000s, even holdouts largely surrendered, with long tons surviving only in niche ceremonial contexts (Royal Navy traditions) and historical references.
12. How do I convert historical British data in long tons to modern metric?
Step-by-step conversion:
1. Identify that it's long tons: Historical British/Commonwealth data (pre-1990s) in "tons" almost certainly means long tons. Verify context (if US source, might be short tons).
2. Use precise conversion factor: 1 long ton = 1.01604691 metric tonnes (or 1,016.0469088 kg exactly).
3. Multiply: Long tons × 1.01604691 = metric tonnes. Example: 50 million long tons of coal (1913 UK production) × 1.01604691 = 50.802 million metric tonnes.
4. For large datasets: Use spreadsheet formula: =A1*1.01604691 where A1 is long tons.
5. Check reasonableness: Long ton is ~1.6% heavier than metric tonne, so metric number should be slightly larger. If wildly different, error likely.
6. Rounding: For historical approximation, 1 long ton ≈ 1 tonne (ignoring 1.6%) often acceptable. For trade/finance, use precise factor.
7. Document conversion: When publishing converted data, note: "Converted from long tons using factor 1.01604691."
Common pitfall: Don't use 2,240 lbs → kg conversion (introduces rounding error). Use exact long ton to metric tonne factor.
Conversion Table: Microgram to Ton (UK)
| Microgram (µg) | Ton (UK) (long ton) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0 |
| 1 | 0 |
| 1.5 | 0 |
| 2 | 0 |
| 5 | 0 |
| 10 | 0 |
| 25 | 0 |
| 50 | 0 |
| 100 | 0 |
| 250 | 0 |
| 500 | 0 |
| 1,000 | 0 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Microgram to Ton (UK)?
To convert Microgram to Ton (UK), enter the value in Microgram in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our weight converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Microgram to Ton (UK)?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Microgram and Ton (UK). You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.
Can I convert Ton (UK) back to Microgram?
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Learn more →What are common uses for Microgram and Ton (UK)?
Microgram and Ton (UK) are both standard units used in weight measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our weight converter for more conversion options.
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All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
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Last verified: December 3, 2025