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Full-Text Articles in Forest Sciences
Tb20: Preliminary Tables Of Some Chemical Elements In Seven Tree Species In Maine, Harold E. Young, Paul N. Carpenter, Russell A. Altenberger
Tb20: Preliminary Tables Of Some Chemical Elements In Seven Tree Species In Maine, Harold E. Young, Paul N. Carpenter, Russell A. Altenberger
Technical Bulletins
These tables show the amount in grams for each of twelve elements for the complete tree and the merchantable bole, for seven tree species (red spruce, balsam fir, hemlock, white pine, white birch, red maple, aspen) in terms of five height classes and ten diameter classes.
Tb18: Mensuration Methods For Site Classification Of Shade Tolerant Tree Species, Leigh E. Hoar Jr., Harold E. Young
Tb18: Mensuration Methods For Site Classification Of Shade Tolerant Tree Species, Leigh E. Hoar Jr., Harold E. Young
Technical Bulletins
All of the climax tree species in Maine are shade tolerant. This means that they have the capacity of surviving and growing slowly in the seedling, sapling and pole-size stages. As a result none of the established methods employing total age are applicable. In searching for a way to overcome this problem an entirely new approach to quantitative site evaluation was conceived. This study evaluates this new mensurational approach to site evaluation for shade-tolerant trees.
Tb17: Fiber Weight And Pulping Characteristics Of The Logging Residue Of Seven Tree Species In Maine, Harold E. Young, Andrew J. Chase
Tb17: Fiber Weight And Pulping Characteristics Of The Logging Residue Of Seven Tree Species In Maine, Harold E. Young, Andrew J. Chase
Technical Bulletins
This publication presents information on fiber weight and pulping characteristics of the logging residue of red spruce, red maple, white birch, white pine, balsam fir, hemlock, and aspen. The accumulation of evidence concerning the amount of fiber in the present logging residue and the pulping potential of that residue justifies this synthesis of the various studies in a single publication.
Tb15: The Standardization Of Symbols In Forest Mensuration, International Union Of Forestry Research Organizations
Tb15: The Standardization Of Symbols In Forest Mensuration, International Union Of Forestry Research Organizations
Technical Bulletins
This technical bulletin reprints the recommendations on the standardization of symbols in forest mensuration, originally published in 1959. The recommendations were made by a small working group in Section 25 of the International Union of Forestry Research Organizations, which was appointed at the Congress of the Union held in Rome in 1953. Members of the group were asked to enquire into the possibility of standarizing the use of symbols (and the systems of measurement) in forest mensuration and to make recommendations.