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Forest Facts

Seedling

Carbon emissions from energy use in 100 square feet of interior framing are 3 times greater when aluminum framing is used in place of wood and 2.5 times greater when steel framing is used.

From raw material extraction to finished product, the energy input is 79 times greater for a ton of aluminum than a ton of lumber.

From raw material extraction to finished product, the energy input is 17 times greater for steel.

From raw material extraction to finished product, the energy input is 3.1 times greater for brick.

From raw material extraction to finished product, the energy input is 3 times greater for concrete blocks.

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Magazine:

2003-05-01 By: Douglas W. MacCleery

Does the Past Provide Lessons for the Future?

2000-12-01

If we stop managing National Forests, they will decline and die, just as they've done at least 16 times since the last Ice Age.

2003-05-05 By: Bruce Vincent

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

It has been a god-awful fire season in the Southwest. Just ask Bob Hennkens.

2009-02-26 By: Susan Tamez and Susan Johnson

The Forest Service and American Indian Tribes Working Together

2007-01-01

In this issue, we write about the still unfolding scandal in the Oregon State University College of Forestry. It is meticulously researched and, we hope a thoughtfully written assessment of the so-called "Donato controversy"-a lamentable if not inexcusable act orchestrated from the shadows by at least two OSU professors and one Forest Service scientist.

2006-01-15 By: Nolan Colegrove, Sr.

The forest is in your hands, take care of it for the people," those are the words of my grandfather, Alfred Nolan Colegrove, Sr.

2006-01-15 By: Jack G. Peterson and James R. Erickson

Successful ITC Collaboration with the Bureau of Land Management, Forest Service, and Bureau of Indian Affairs

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

"Almost anything" is the quick answer to the question.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

Of all the questions confronting restoration forestry's proponents this one is the most difficult to answer.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

The Southwest's timber industry is long gone, a victim of its near total dependence on national forest timber sale programs that were phased out in the 1990s.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

When logging slash is not properly disposed of it can be a fire hazard.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

It is hard to believe that the Southwest's tumbledown forests once fit Edward Beale's idyllic description, but they did.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

If we do nothing, most of the Southwest's forests will be lost to fire.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

Yes there are good forest fires. In fact, foresters often "prescribe" fire to dispose of accumulated debris, enrich the soil by speeding nutrient recycling or retard the growth of shrubs or grasses that would otherwise crowd out recently planted seedlings.

2000-12-01

A coalition of the nation's most powerful environmental organizations has asked Congress to approve legislation that would outlaw logging in National Forests.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

Yes, the West's wildfire situation can get worse. In fact, it will get worse, probably much worse.

2000-12-04

In northern Arizona, along the north and south rims of the Grand Canyon, the National Park Service is considering the unthinkable: logging in a National Park.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

The immediate causes of the Southwest's wildfires vary: lightning strikes, careless campers and arson. But there are underlying factors- reasons why these fires are so large and so much more ferocious than any for which evidence exists in natural history-that add up to real problems for communities, firefighters and the nation.

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

2002-06-03 By: Jim Petersen

The skies have cleared over northern Arizona and New Mexico, marking the end of the worst Southwest forest fire season in anyone's memory.

2003-05-05 By: Jay O'Laughlin

Softwood Resource Conditions and Management Implications

2003-05-05 By: Jim Petersen

Softwood Resource Conditions and Management Implications

2003-05-05 By: Jim Petersen

Forests and Wildfire Risks in the United States

2000-12-01

Next to a nuclear explosion, there is no more lethal killing force on earth than a big forest fire. The most violent are called "blowups" because they are capable of exploding.

2003-05-05 By: John R. Olson

Meeting Society's Expectations While Expanding Shareholder Value

2003-05-01

Time is running out for forests in the Southwest. Wildfires and insects are devouring them in a death-dance unlike anything anyone has ever seen: unlike anything for which scientists can find precedent in nature.

2003-05-01 By: Jim Petersen

1998-09-01 By: Jim Petersen

In this issue, we write about forests and forestry in the Northeast. To grasp the magnitude of this story, turn to the back page. There you will find a list of 183 contributors who helped fund this project.

1998-06-01 By: Jim Petersen

In this Issue

1998-09-07 By: Eric Johnson

The logging industry across northern New York State and New England has a long, rich and colorful history, backed by a mountain of tradition and popular folklore.

1998-06-01 By: Alan Newell

Indian forestry occupies a unique and often contradictory place in the history of tribal communities

1998-06-01

Since the middle of the nineteenth century, there have been four clearly defined periods of United States Indian policy.

1998-05-31 By: Jim Petersen

How else should a trustee manage a property held in trust other than as is obviously considered prudent for the management of his own property?

1998-06-01 By: Gary S. Morishima

For countless generations, the economic and spiritual well being of Indian people has been tied to the land, air, water and all things that walk, fly, swim or grow roots.

1998-06-01 By: Don Motanic

Before white settlement began in America, the rules, roles and relationships linking Indians to their forests were not governed by legal codes.

2003-07-01 By: Jim Petersen

In the future, the West's federal forests will be cared for by two groups of service providers: garbage collectors and surgeons.

2000-05-01 By: Jim Petersen

An Interview with Minnesota State Forester Jerry Rose

2000-05-01 By: Jim Petersen

2000-12-01

The difference between "Zero Cut" and "Forest Restoration" is perhaps best illustrated in terms of nature's three most intractable lessons: It is not possible to save or preserve a forest. The only constant in nature is change.

2000-12-01

Listening to the National Forest harvest debate from the sidelines, one might easily conclude not much has changed in the Forest Service over the last 25 years, but the agency and its mission are both very different than they were-even ten years ago.

2000-12-01

Since its inception in the aftermath of the Great 1910 Fire, the nation's forest fire-fighting policy has been closely tied to a conservation ethic of near biblical proportion: waste not, want not.

1998-09-07

The Remarkable Recovery of Northeastern Forests

1998-09-07 By: Jim Petersen

Across the Northeast, net annual forest growth exceeds harvesting by safe margins, except in Maine spruce-fir forests devastated by the most recent spruce budworm epidemic.

2000-05-01 By: Jim Petersen

An Interview with Top Industry Observers: Jim Bowyer and John Krantz

2000-12-01

The claim that ailing western forests can heal themselves if they are left alone seems based on a belief that pre-European forests and prairies were naturally functioning ecosystems uninfluenced by humans.

2004-01-01 By: Annelies Pool

Traditional Uses Of Forest Products Drive Management Philosophy

2007-01-01 By: Jim Peterson

In this issue, we write about the still unfolding scandal in the Oregon State University College of Forestry.

2006-05-15 By: Jim Petersen

In this issue we write about environmental and economic collapse in eastern Oregon's Blue Mountains, a region known by many as the "Iron Triangle,"

2009-02-17 By: John Gordon

Forests affect the economic, cultural, and spiritual well being of tribal communities in many ways.

2009-02-26 By: Gremaine White

For thousands of years Salish and Pend d'Oreille people have been lighting fires in the Northern Rockies for the benefit of plant and animal communities.

2009-03-03

Assistant Deputy Minister, Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada

2009-02-26 By: Larry Mason

Some visitors are fortunate to be invited to walk in tribal forests.

2006-05-15 By: Dave Skinner

Eastern Oregon's forests and communities are in a death spiral. Can anything be done to save them from certain disaster?

2006-05-15 By: Dave Skinner

Eastern Oregon's forests and communities are in a death spiral. Can anything be done to save them from certain disaster?

2006-04-01 By: Jim Petersen

In January the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a call for proposals for development of a recovery plan for the northern spotted owl. It's about time.

2006-01-15 By: Catherine M. Mater

Over the last few years, there has been much discussion of the use of the Montreal Process Criteria

2006-04-03 By: Dave Skinner

As most years, 1973 had its ups and downs.

2006-05-15 By: Dave Skinner

Eastern Oregon's forests and communities are in a death spiral. Can anything be done to save them from certain disaster?

2006-05-15 By: Dave Skinner

Eastern Oregon's forests and communities are in a death spiral. Can anything be done to save them from certain disaster?

2009-03-04 By: Kenneth A. Armson1 R.P.F.

A World Leader in Sustainable Forest Management

2009-03-17 By: Jim Petersen

2009-03-05 By: Markian Petruncio, Ph.D. and Edwin Lewis

The Yakama Reservation in southcentral Washington State is a magnificent cultural resource for the 9,800 enrolled members of the Yakama Nation.

2009-03-04 By: Susan Mader Zinck

After 400 years, forestry still drives the province's economy

2009-03-06

One of the most impressive examples of post-fire forest restoration in America is located west of Portland, Oregon on State Highway 6: The Tillamook State Forest.

2009-03-06

How Can the Religious Freedom Needs of Native Americans be Accommodated

2006-01-15 By: Dave Skinner

How and why tribal forestlands are managed differently from federal forestlands

2006-01-15 By: John Sessions

A comparison of the 1991 and 2001 national assessments.

2004-01-01 By: Avery Ascher

Sustainability Sets the Pace In Provincial Forests

2004-01-01 By: Moira Farr

Province takes a serious look at forest sustainability

2004-01-01 By: Remy Charest

Stakeholders and citizens are getting more and more involved

2004-01-01 By: Gwen Martin

A Rich Forestry History and a Powerful Vision of the Future

2004-01-01 By: Shiela christie

Tony Morrison's Lifetime Devotion To Island Forests

2004-01-01 By: David Holehouse

Diverse land-use demands and landscapes influence Alberta's management approaches

2004-01-01 By: Marj Welch

The Standoff Ends: Industry, First Nations and Environmentalists Make Peace. B.C. Embraces Innovative Results-based Forestry Program

2003-11-15 By: Jim Petersen

The United States is falling further and further behind in forest product research. Canada, Finland, Sweden and the European Economic Community are setting the global standard now.

2003-11-03 By: Jim Peterson

In this issue we write about the twin towers of human progress: knowledge and inspiration.

2003-11-15 By: Jim Peterson

I'd recommend the Forest Products Lab to anyone. They do a marvelous job." Phil Archuletta

2004-01-01 By: Elaine Schiman

Building Forestry Partnerships For Prosperity

2004-01-01 By: Tom Douglas

National Forest Strategy And Canada Forest Accord Turn Potential Enemies Into Across-The-Table Dialoguers

2004-07-01 By: Tim Partin

2006-01-15 By: Todd A. Salberg

Integrating cultural Resource Management and Hazardous Fuels Reduction

2006-01-15 By: Mark Higley

So this is exciting, we've been crouched in the huckleberry for nearly an hour surrounded by a billion mosquitoes and finally the owl has taken a mouse. "

2006-01-15 By: Bodie Shaw

Indeed, Indian Country has come a long way during this past century in terms of the evolution of the Indian firefighting force.

2006-01-15 By: Don Motanic

Omar Bradley stood up to talk about his holiday wishes in December 2003.

2006-01-15 By: Timothy E. Moriarty, David W. Wilson, and Robert P. Bizal

Resource planning greatly strengthens a tribe's opportunity to sustain tribal vision and resources of value.

2006-01-15 By: Jim Durglo

Nestled next to the Mission Range of the Rocky Mountains in western Montana, is the Flathead Indian Reservation

2006-01-15 By: Bill Downes and John Vitello

What's funding got to do with it? Funding is the critical key in every aspect of the Indian Forestry Program.

2005-01-15 By: Gary S. Morishima

Attend any public meeting on forest management and you'll probably encounter a whole school of red herring.

2004-07-01 By: Jim Petersen

2004-07-01 By: Dave Skinner

Tucked into the corrugated folds of far Southwest Oregon, the Siskiyou National Forest has been ground zero in the national forest policy wars for 25 years.

2003-08-01 By: Jim Petersen

"The only thing being protected in the public's forests today is the political influence of environmental groups..."

News and announcements:

2007-01-01 By: Charles E. Kay

Were Native People Keystone Predators? A Continuous-Time Analysis of Wildlife Observations Made by Lewis and Clark in 1804-1806

2008-12-22

2008-08-22 By: Mark E. Harmon

Persistent changes in tree mortality rates can alter forest structure, composition, and ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration.

2009-03-01 By: Charles E. Keegan III

Severe wildfires in 2000 testify to the hazardous forest conditions over large areas of New Mexico.

2009-01-06

For years, utilities felt their future was in coal and nuclear. Today, under pressure to go green, they are about to make some wrong decisions that will negatively affect our industry and society as a whole.

2008-06-02 By: Diane Denenberg

A Summary Report of Wood Utilization Efforts in Heating Systems in the Western United States and Territories.

2004-12-06 By: Robert A. Harrington

An assessment on the condition of Montana's forests, and the communities that depend on them

2004-12-01 By: Robert A. Harrington

An assessment of the condition of Montana's forests and the communities that depend on them

2005-01-03

Important Progress Has Been Made, but Challenges Remain to Completing a Cohesive Strategy

2006-03-01 By: council of Western Foresters

Since the passage of the Healthy Forests Restoration Act (HFRA) in 2003, communities have been charged with becoming active partners in their own protection from wildfire.

2006-07-03 By: Charles E. Keegan III

The last two decades have brought major changes in timber harvest, product output, and forest management to the western United States

2006-04-03 By: Jack Hulsey and Karen Ripley

A Net Cost Approach to a True Wildfire Protection Program

2003-07-07 By: Oregon State University

Management Options for Forest Regeneration, Fire and Insect Risk Reduction and Timber Salvage

2003-07-07 By: Larry Mason

Forest fuel reduction treatments are needed, as demonstrated by the increased number of devastating crown fires and annual increases in National Forest acres categorized as high risk.

1999-03-01 By: Dr. W.R.J (Wink) Sutton

International Forestry Report - This report featured in the 1999 Annual Report of Evergreen Forests Limited and is reproduced by Forest Enterprises Limited with the permission of Evergreen Forests Limited and the author Dr. W. R. J. (Wink) Sutton.

2002-01-16

The use of the National Forest Reserves. History and Objects of Forest Reserves

2003-04-07 By: Henry Spelter and Matthew Alderman

About 160 fewer softwood sawmills are operating in the United States and Canada than were 8 years ago. Nevertheless, the combined capacity of the remaining mills has increased by 16%, to over 173 million cubic meters.

2007-12-12 By: Diane Denenberg

A Western Summary 2007

2008-03-01 By: Charles E. Kay

2008-02-05 By: Indur M. Goklany

The state-of-the-art British-sponsored fasttrack assessment of the global impacts of climate change, a major input to the much-heralded Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change, indicates that through the year 2100, the contribution of climate change to human health and environmental threats will generally be overshadowed by factors not related to climate change.

2008-01-28 By: Thomas M. Bonnicksen, Ph.D.

Overview and Technical Information (Beta Version)

2007-09-03 By: Larry Mason

Shifting timber harvest levels, locations, management treatments and log qualities influence both the level and location of employment for forestry industry companies which, in turn, precipitate fluctuations in downstream economic activity.

2007-06-19 By: Jay O'Laughlin

This presentation focuses on potential improvements in the implementation of the National Fire Plan in Idaho.

2007-03-08 By: Diane Denenberg

A Framework for Cooperative Forest Stewardship - March 2007

2007-01-11 By: Diane Denenberg

Developed by the Western Urban and Community Forestry Committee Of the Council of Western State Foresters and the Western Forestry Leadership Coalition

2007-01-08 By: Larry Mason

Development of sustainable forest management alternatives for the Olympic Experimental State Forest (OESF) that simultaneously produce a combination of environmental conditions and harvest revenues to meet the stewardship objectives of the State of Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR) imposes a difficult burden with high hurdles that must be met.

2007-05-04 By: Diane Denenberg

This paper has been prepared by forestry representatives of the U.S. tropical islands and the US Forest Service for use by the State & Private Forestry Program Redesign Committee.

2007-06-01 By: Diane Denenberg

A summary of approaches to water quality implementation and effectiveness monitoring

2007-05-15 By: Diane Denenberg

A Report on 2006 Wildland Fires by the Independent Large Wildfire Cost Panel Chartered by the U. S. Secretary of Agriculture

2009-06-15

2009-06-15

2009-03-23

Leading the way to a healthy environment, a green economy and a sustainable future. Environmental Transition Recommendations for the Obama Administration

2009-03-20 By: Western Forestry Leadership Coalition

Western Forestry Leadership Coalition Invasive Plant Strategy Report The Silent Wildfire

2009-03-16 By: Jay O'Laughlin

During the 2007 session of the Idaho Legislature two concurrent resolutions (HCR 26, HCR 27) authorized the creation of interim committees to address two forestry issues.

2009-03-12

2009-03-17 By: Jay O'Laughlin

The U.S. forest sector (forest management and wood products manufacturing) sequesters enough carbon each year to offset 10% of the nation's carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.Managing forests to uptake and store more atmospheric carbon adds another dimension to the enduring question, when should trees be cut?

2009-03-09 By: Diane Denenberg

A Framework for Cooperative Forest Stewardship 2009 Update

Pages:

"We must always consider the environment and people together, as though they are one, because the
human need to use natural resources is fundamental to our continued presence on earth."
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