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Loading... Forest Giants of the Pacific Coastby Robert van Pelt
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The forests of the Pacific Coast are the tallest and densest on earth. Even after a century of intensive exploitation, their trees remain unmatched in overall size, height, and age. Forest Giants of the Pacific Coast is a guide to the 20 largest species of conifers in North America--from the southern Sierras to Vancouver Island, and from the coast to northwestern Montana. Overviews of 20 species feature- Color maps showing distribution of species and locations of individual giant trees- Comparative drawings and measurements of giants- Color photographs of typical trees and cones- Discussion of species and comparison of giantsIndividual profiles of 117 giant trees feature- Line drawings- Color photographs- Measurements- Description of history, preservation, characteristics, present condition, and locationGiant trees are those with the greatest wood volume. From the Ponderosa Pine "Bear Creek Twin" to the Coast Douglas Fir "Ol' Jed," from Giant Sequoias to Western Redcedars, the trees are depicted as individuals. All are unique specimens that represent the extremes to which their species can grow. To seek out the ruling giants and their neighboring contenders, Robert Van Pelt has traveled the length and breadth of the Pacific Coast and its forests, equipped with a camera, a sketchpad, and a survey laser, amassing a database of over 5,000 individual trees.Forest Giants of the Pacific Coast will be of interest to hikers and naturalists as well as to arborists, foresters, and arm-chair explorers. No library descriptions found. |
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In spite of the beautiful photos, this is an information book with plenty of text on each tree. There is a range map for each species with the taller trees spotted on that range map.
The author has learned a varety of tree climbing technique allowing him and other researchers to visit the uper canopy of many of these trees to study the unique ecology of old growth canopy. ( )