Where the wood is

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Dalmatian90

Dalmatian90

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Sep 11, 2008
Messages
6,916
Location
Northeastern Connecticut
From NASA -- Woody Biomass, darker color the more tons per acre:

Where-the-wild-things-grow-NASA-map-shows-virtually-every-tree-in-the-US.jpg


My biggest "Cool" is I've never seen something called the "Great Appalachian Valley" so clearly on a map before -- that's the narrow strip of cleared land that comes down Lake Champlain & Hudson River, cuts across New Jersey, goes through Lancaster County, down into the Shenandoah, and keeps on trucking down into Tennessee.

And looking at New England, I understand better why (in addition to subsidies, etc) why folks keep proposing wood-burning electric plants here...it's where the wood is.
 
darkbyrd

darkbyrd

Forest Hugger
Joined
Dec 29, 2010
Messages
6,047
Location
Pisgah Nat'l Forest, NC
Watersheds is my guess.

Respectfully, I disagree. I look at my state of north carolina, and there is one of those lines running north-south, across several river basins. But it does roughly correspond with the "fall line," where the piedmont drops off to the coastal plain. So maybe it's a geological line, not an administrative line. I'm still very curious as to what it might be.
 
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