Naval Store Industry in the Report of the Chief of the Division of Forestry in the US Department of Agriculture for 1892. This last mentioned publication has a very clear and concise account of the different methods of tapping, with the advantages and... Pamphlets on Forestry in North Carolina - Page 1031894Full view - About this book
| Franklin Benjamin Hough - Forests and forestry - 1883 - 604 pages
...to the forestal maps of Messrs. Walker & Brewer of the autumn of 1870. The reports of Mr. Hough, now chief of the Division of Forestry in the US Department of Agriculture, are handsomely noticed, and the Catalogue of Trees prepared by Dr. G. Vasey, botanist of the same bureau,... | |
| Forests and forestry - 1894 - 904 pages
...Maritime Pine; Desnoyers' Tapping of the Maritime Pine; Prof. L. Boppe's Forestry, and The Naval Stare Industry in the Report of the Chief of the Division...concise account of the different methods of tapping, witli the advantages and disadvantages of the different systems, and is well illustrated. It can probably... | |
| Botany - 1898 - 216 pages
...American types in European collections. Mr. Gifford Pinchot, the well-known forestry expert, has been made chief of the Division of Forestry in the US Department of Agriculture, taking the position vacated by Dr. BE Fernow, who becomes the head of the New York School of Forestry.... | |
| North Carolina. Geological Survey Section - Geology - 1894 - 1128 pages
...of France) to be about one cent a year for each • THE FRENCH SYSTEM APPLIED IN NORTH CAROLINA. 105 tree. To change from the American to the Hugues system...any one desiring to know more of the merits of the llugues system and the condition of the naval store industry in other parts of the United States and... | |
| Shelley Smith Mastran - Appalachian Region, Southern - 1983 - 230 pages
...exchange process is the case of Dr. Bernhard Edward Fernow, one of four sons of Bernhard Eduard Fernow, Chief of the Division of Forestry in the US Department of Agriculture before Gifford Pinchot. Dr. Fernow, a mechanical engineer, purchased a summer cabin near Highlands,... | |
| Susan Q. Stranahan - History - 1995 - 344 pages
...New York, embarked on a similar effort.) In 1899, Pennsylvania owned just 1 8. Pinchot would become chief of the division of forestry in the US Department of Agriculture in 1898. Seven years later, when the US Forest Service was created, he headed that agency. He later... | |
| Peter McDonald, J. P. Lassoie - Nature - 1996 - 462 pages
...literature. For many years, the only regularly published account of forestry in the US could be found in the "Report of the Chief of the Division of Forestry" in the annual Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture . The 1886 edition is memorable, for this is the year... | |
| Chris Bolgiano - History - 1998 - 330 pages
...fifteen thousand acres in Pennsylvania, which were harvested for charcoal. In 1886, he was appointed chief of the Division of Forestry in the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). He brought to that recently established division the idea of sustained yield, in which timber... | |
| Dave Dempsey - History - 2001 - 372 pages
...government. There he came under the influence of one of the great early names in US forestry, Dr. BE Fernow, chief of the Division of Forestry in the US Department of Agriculture. In 1898, Roth followed Fernow to Cornell University's College of Forestry in New York to become assistant... | |
| Melanie Louise Simo - Architecture - 2003 - 332 pages
...Harvard's program of studies in forestry, with the help of Gifford Pinchot, who had succeeded Fernow as chief of the Division of Forestry in the US Department of Agriculture. 29 Some years earlier, Shaler had hoped to start a similar program in landscape architecture, to be... | |
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