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This Map Shows Where All The Trees Are In The US
TBI ^ | 1-`12-2012 | Dina Spector

Posted on 01/12/2012 5:21:20 PM PST by blam

This Map Shows Where All The Trees Are In The US

Dina Spector
Jan. 12, 2012, 2:48 PM

NASA's Earth Observatory just released a map illustrating where all the trees are in America.

The map was created over six years by Josef Kellndorfer and Wayne Walker of the Woods Hole Research Center (WHRC) in collaboration with the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Geological Survey.

The dark swaths of green represent parts of the country with the greatest concentration of biomass.

You can see dense tree cover in the Pacific Northwest as well New England, which has been reforested after intensive logging in the 18th and 19th centuries.


(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: forests; trees; usforestservice
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To: Vince Ferrer
'And finally, we have allowed some lands that were in agriculture to go back to forests. '

Basically, Uncle Sam bought land and/or took it and planted trees, ie FDR.

1900's etc. private enterprise did a poor job of 'preservation' and we have learned from such mistakes.

Also, various disease[Chestnut blight] wiped out many of our old growth, and other faster growing trees took their place.

21 posted on 01/12/2012 5:39:56 PM PST by Theoria
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To: blam

I live in the middle of a Pecan orchard, none this year due to the drought (texas), so many trees here, I guess thats why Ferdinand Lindheimer (Texas botanist) moved here when Comanches were still roaming these parts. When I feel old I walk around the corner and theres a 175 year old Live Oak (I think it’s a live Oak), second oldest in Texas, Oldest being in El Paso and theres always the 5 foot thick cypress on the Guadalupe/Comal River. Welcome to the Texas Hill Country.

Though it’s gonna be in the 20’s tonight the locally supplied anti-freeze (Dripping Springs Vodka) is excellent.


22 posted on 01/12/2012 5:41:53 PM PST by corbe (mystified)
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To: blam

Maine wins!!


23 posted on 01/12/2012 5:42:53 PM PST by plymaniac (2012=1980)
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To: djf

30 miles north/northeast of me;

http://rainforestgetaways.com/html/valley_of_rainforest_giants.html


24 posted on 01/12/2012 5:44:03 PM PST by Grunthor (I am a conservative, neither half of the one party represents my views.)
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To: wardaddy
"My homestate...much like where you reside is covered in them"

Yup...73% forested and that is increasing by 1 million acres yearly.

The number one export is timber products...and, that equals a GDP the same as Iran with five times less people.

25 posted on 01/12/2012 5:45:13 PM PST by blam
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To: rlmorel
We saw a deer on the side of the road...

I took this photo of one wandering through town here today.

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

Other times its turkeys or cranes. Coyotes don't come into town but I hear them just outside town on lots of quiet nights. Black bears appear to be making a comeback in southern Michigan as well.

Personally, I'm a little tired of urban liberals flapping their gums about how badly I damage nature.
26 posted on 01/12/2012 5:46:12 PM PST by cripplecreek (Stand with courage or shut up and do as you're told.)
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To: blam
I've read (a few years ago)that there are more trees alive in the US today than there was when the Europeans first landed.

That quite possibly might be true. One problem with that, though, is that the species composition is very different. The current relative abundance of various forest habitats is maximized for timber production and other things. One side effect, though, is a loss of species diversity. A loblolly pine plantation and an old growth cove hardwood forest differ greatly in the species composition.

Probably 25 percent or more of all species are restricted to less common habitat types that occupy less than one percent of the land mass. Rare species are generally confined to rare habitats. (If they could survive well in common habitats, they would be common.) That is one of the reasons why the smaller patches of unusual habitat are more ecologically valuable than they would seem for their size.
27 posted on 01/12/2012 5:46:44 PM PST by Engraved-on-His-hands
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To: blam

We have more trees in New York than you have in Alabama. Ha ha! ;-)


28 posted on 01/12/2012 5:47:19 PM PST by decimon
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To: cripplecreek
"Large map. "

Boy howdy. I can see my little pond.(ahem)

29 posted on 01/12/2012 5:48:43 PM PST by blam
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To: dangus

>> “MIssissippi Delta” and a strange slash from Virginia (the Shenendoah Valley?) <<

Good observation about a couple of famous agricultural areas!

Also striking is the crescent sweeping from mid-Alabama up thru northeastern Mississippi, all the way to the Tennessee line. It’s an old cotton-producing area that was a stronghold of the slave-holding plantation aristocracy before the Civil War.

This latter region is often called the “Black Belt” in Alabama (mainly for its rich soil, but also for its black-majority population) and the “Prairie” in northeastern Mississippi. Fascinating how such land-using and demographic patterns have been maintained over nearly 200 years!


30 posted on 01/12/2012 5:49:50 PM PST by Hawthorn
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To: KoRn
"Would love to see what that map would have looked like 300 years ago."

Probably something like this:


31 posted on 01/12/2012 5:50:24 PM PST by Rebelbase
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To: blam

My house isn’t there.. I have 6 trees on my lot and woods next door..I love trees, they are one of my passions


32 posted on 01/12/2012 5:50:23 PM PST by RnMomof7
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To: blam; vetvetdoug

which explains post 26

I drove up the trace from Tupelo north to the Leipers Fork TN exit which is near my property

and deer everywhere for 150 miles

several scorable bucks....

btw...slight snow here...kids out...they are happy


33 posted on 01/12/2012 5:50:35 PM PST by wardaddy (I fear we cannot beat Roger Ailes and beltway GOP)
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To: corbe
Well, I encourage ya to head down to the coast[Rockport] and see the 1000-2000 year old Live oak[Goose Island Oak].


34 posted on 01/12/2012 5:52:09 PM PST by Theoria
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To: Vince Ferrer
This is a picture I took a while back at the Old North Bridge in Concord, Massachusetts, where we took our first real swing back at the British troops:

I drive by this nearly every day, and one bitter cold, windy February morning, it just struck me as I drove by, so I stopped. It was cold enough that morning with the wind to make my eyes water uncontrollably.

Interesting thing is, there are all these trees and vegetation around there, but an illustration of the area done back around that time (I saw it in a museum here) shows no trees as far as you can see in any direction! It kind of blows your mind to stand there and imagine that...

35 posted on 01/12/2012 5:52:32 PM PST by rlmorel ("A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject." Winston Churchill)
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To: Grunthor

I’ve been in that general neck of the woods many times. Used to go steelheading out near Forks, and there are still remnants of the original logging.
Seeing a length of a tree ten or twelve feet in diameter laying on the ground...

I drove up from somewhere on the west side of Hood Canal into the Olympic National Forest. As soon as you cross the border, the trees double and sometimes almost triple in size. Mostly cedar.


36 posted on 01/12/2012 5:54:33 PM PST by djf (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2801220/posts)
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To: blam
my woods are lovely, dark and deep...
37 posted on 01/12/2012 5:55:13 PM PST by Chode (American Hedonist - *DTOM* -ww- NO Pity for the LAZY)
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To: blam
“I've read (a few years ago)that there are more trees alive in the US today than there was when the Europeans first landed.”

Correct-a-mundo!!!!!

That forested area betwixt the Appalachia's and the Mississippi River had a large agrarian population that had burned back most of the forest there. Disease, in advance of any pioneering, collapsed this society.

By the time settlers came they saw a mature forest. The plains native-americans ritually burned back the forest where the plains and the forest met for several reasons including simply keeping the forest at bay. Insect control and fertilization of the prairie for better grazing grass and also for a clear line of view against enemy encroachment.

38 posted on 01/12/2012 5:56:44 PM PST by Puckster
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To: Theoria; Pride in the USA

That’s a magnificent tree!


39 posted on 01/12/2012 5:58:05 PM PST by lonevoice (Klepto Baracka Marxo, impeach we much.)
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To: blam

That is true.


40 posted on 01/12/2012 6:00:00 PM PST by marty60
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