- Page 1 and 2: _#i_ _ United States __DepartmentOf
- Page 3 and 4: PROCEEDINGS OF THE MEETING ON PLANN
- Page 5 and 6: Table of Contents Welcome a_d Annou
- Page 7 and 8: Page Commercial aspen thinning: Syn
- Page 9: THE AMERICAN FOREST AND PAPER ASSOC
- Page 13 and 14: that Forest District when they are
- Page 15 and 16: • The old stream bed may not be a
- Page 17 and 18: the knowledge that you have taken t
- Page 19 and 20: • where stability is not a questi
- Page 21 and 22: Saturated ground Saturated ground k
- Page 23 and 24: Actual forest areas Continued The o
- Page 25 and 26: The education programs for forest e
- Page 27 and 28: planting or re-planting operations
- Page 29 and 30: Forestry in Finland, 17 p. For_ts,
- Page 31 and 32: forestedarea - 8 million hectaresat
- Page 33 and 34: A detailed and multi-disciplinary a
- Page 35 and 36: eech forest. As far as hollow-dwell
- Page 37 and 38: Fruitful exchanges between forester
- Page 39 and 40: Degron R., 1995b.Synth6sedes6tudes_
- Page 41 and 42: (A,C,L) and will only briefly repea
- Page 43 and 44: State Program Name/Type Cooperators
- Page 45 and 46: A consortium in GA pulled together
- Page 47 and 48: EVALUATION OF HARVEST PLANNING TRAI
- Page 49 and 50: annual precipitation ranging from 3
- Page 51 and 52: continuous forest scene in areas wi
- Page 53 and 54: need to avoid no-bid or below-cost
- Page 55 and 56: PREDICTING THE OPERABILITY OF SOUTH
- Page 57 and 58: since the tree was cut. In addition
- Page 59 and 60: _i 5 PLOT AVERAGE DISTURBANCE ALL P
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Table2. Percentofobservations inDis
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TIMBER HARVESTER PERCEIVED COSTS Mi
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unknown, it is not possible to tell
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Net fmancial effects of applying BM
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A NEW CONCEPT AND APPROACH TO THE e
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205,000 hectares (506,000 acres) in
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Procedure At the cable sites, every
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#of LoggingDamages Scars Scar Scar
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Table 6. Advantages anddisadvantage
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alternative commercial thinning pre
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includesa reviewof standdamagerelat
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conductthinning operationsdue to lo
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Nilsson and Hyppel (1968) found, du
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CONCLUSIONS Chavez,T.D., jr., R.L.
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HOW TO MANAGE THINNING WITH LOW bio
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trees in the standand were notin an
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10°.°° I 90.00 _................
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oom. Later - aRera couple of hours-
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there is also a philosophy to work
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SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT IN IN
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;' nitrogen fixation and denitrific
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Pim _'-__--_¢_'_ 4.33 50 sm,_ ....
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Biomass production and nutrient upt
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CONCLUSIONS Bonnmm, B.T.; Gordon, J
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CUT-TO-I_NGTH HARVESTING the choppe
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•f " • Figure 1, The modified 1
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RESULTS Tree size was analyzed to d
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However, we feel that these are not
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LITERATURE REVIEW METHODS The skyli
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Table 1. Attributes of the four stu
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Residual stand damages amount of or
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Sherar, James R. and David A. Tillm
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prices, over-capacity in processing
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andprecision with other models that
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appear to more accurately describe
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PROGRESS REPORT ON THE between 1985
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collection of geometric nodes conne
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A dynamic programming algorithm in
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THE COST OF PRODUCT SORTING DURING
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The separation of logs with similar
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Table 1. The costs of sorting produ
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INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS FOR FOREST
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coordinates the work of 2700 techni
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carefully and comparing products on
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STUDY OBJECTIVE AND CONTENTS microc
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Slopecalculation Technicaleconomics
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Epstein, R.; Weintraub, A.; Sapunar
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COMMERCIAL ASPEN THINNING: SYNTHESI
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HW-BUCK: A COMPUTERIZED OPTIMAL BUC
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Fords Culverts have been the mainst
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equipment to install and remove. Be
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automatically and uniformly vary th
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temperature is above freezing. Kars
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MECHANICAL DELIMBING OF NORTHERN HA
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CLASSIFYING TIME Non-Workplace Time
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DISCUSSION 1UFRO members will eithe
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RAPID STABILIZATION OF THAWING SOIL
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Figure la_ Trafficking vehicle -- H
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tire chips can replace granular flU
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a herringbone pattern at 45 ° angl
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Figure 7b. Uni-mat TM wood mat -- w
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Table 2. Site character_ation activ
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Humphrey,D.N., Eaton, R.A. 1993. Ti
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STREAM CROSSINGS l by Eric L. Kay K
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10. Limbing, buck and topping (demo
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Full-tree to roadside harvesting sy
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THE WESTERN GREAT LAKES REGION: 1.
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m,. __,_,_, I fiber and additional
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Wisconsin stakeholder Forest Resour
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INLAND WEST REGIONAL REPORT _ Price
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timberharvesting optionwiththefores
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COFE REGIONAL REPORT - WESTERN To m
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COFE REGIONAL REPORT: EUROPE I by E
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effectiveness and use of these mode
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moved to the block. Thus, the cost
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Minimumrequiredhoursof use, HMIN an
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in S/ha. This is then added to the
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Table 3. Mill purchase and delivery
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TIMBER HARVEST PLANNING IN THE A re
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On one extreme is the small private
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Harvesting options should first be
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ealistic and environmental sensitiv
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MAXIMIZING FINANCIAL YIELDS WHILE T
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Table 1. FOREX results by option. O
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Table 2. FOREX habitat/utilization
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_aaf, R. M.; Scott, V. E.; Hamre, R
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(Bragg et al., 1994). The damage es
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they are an acc_ted method of descr
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DEVELOPMENT OF FOREST ENGINEERING W
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forester) to "spot in a roadthat co
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in stimulatingthe U.S. ForestServic
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The ASAE's technical journal, Trans
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A short time later, J. Kenneth Pear
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of the dispersedlypublished engin_d
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held its annual convention in Albuq
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INTEGRATED FOREST MANAGEMENT Althou
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established. The following is a des
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the divisions. The strategic forest
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impossible to develop an acceptable
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and to help them generate new model
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QUALITY-BASED WOOD PROCUREMENT INTR
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In wood procurement, the factors th
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BUSINESS PROCESS IMPROVEMENT: THE K
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competitive and able to survive dow
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PROJECTS IN PROGRESS AT SWEDISH The
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Model 1 L_.downer Am manager Loggin
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Making internal and externalcompari
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Forest and Park Service, which mana
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6; difference of skewness was used
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For evaluating the proposed method
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question will also be the accuracy
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DATA SOURCES base and digital base
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Figure 1 shows the inverse linear r
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DISCUSSION SUMMARY The model proves
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Our job at the North Central Forest