The Forester: A Practical Treatise on British Forestry and Arboriculture for Landowners, Land Agents, and Foresters, Volum 2W. Blackwood and Sons, 1905 |
Innhold
344 | |
352 | |
375 | |
380 | |
385 | |
401 | |
402 | |
419 | |
61 | |
65 | |
72 | |
89 | |
96 | |
105 | |
117 | |
127 | |
133 | |
139 | |
188 | |
196 | |
219 | |
221 | |
230 | |
237 | |
248 | |
256 | |
268 | |
289 | |
302 | |
337 | |
423 | |
432 | |
462 | |
466 | |
486 | |
501 | |
511 | |
526 | |
532 | |
538 | |
564 | |
589 | |
605 | |
616 | |
621 | |
624 | |
626 | |
627 | |
629 | |
634 | |
639 | |
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The Forester: A Practical Treatise on British Forestry and ..., Volum 2 John Nisbet Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1925 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acre age-classes annual falls antennæ attacks autumn Average Yield Tables bark basal area become Beech beetles Birch branches Britain broad-leaved trees brown calculated cambium canker caterpillars cent Cockchafer compartments conidia conifers coppice copse cubic contents damage destructive diameter Douglas Fir eggs estimated favourable feed felled felling-series foliage forestry forests frost fungi fungus genus girth ground growing grubs height hibernate highwoods hypha inch long injurious insects kind of tree land Larch large numbers larva larvæ leaves Life-history mature measured method moths mycelium natural regeneration needles nurseries parasitic percentage plants poles Poplar Prevention and Extermination produced protection pupa pupate rate of growth roots rotation saprophytic sapwood scheme of management Scots Pine seedlings shoots Silver Fir soil and situation species spores sporophores spring Spruce stems thinnings timber timber-crops twigs usually weeds whole wind wing-cases winter woodlands working-circle working-plan young plantations
Populære avsnitt
Side 392 - means any land used as arable meadow or pasture ground only, land used for a plantation or a wood or for...
Side 392 - If the land is used only for a plantation or a wood, the value shall be estimated as if the land, instead of being a plantation or a wood, were let and occupied in its natural and unimproved state.
Side 392 - ... such lands and heritages might in their natural state be reasonably expected to let from year to year as pasture or grazing lands...