enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Logging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logging

    Logging is the beginning of a supply chain that provides raw material for many products societies worldwide use for housing, construction, energy, and consumer paper products. Logging systems are also used to manage forests, reduce the risk of wildfires, and restore ecosystem functions, [2] though their efficiency for these purposes has been ...

  3. High grading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_grading

    In forestry, high grading, also sometimes referred to as selective logging, is a selective type of timber harvesting that removes the highest grade of timber (i.e. the most merchantable stems) in an area of forest.

  4. Uses of radioactivity in oil and gas wells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uses_of_radioactivity_in...

    The oil and gas industry in general uses unsealed radioactive solids (powder and granular forms), liquids and gases to investigate or trace the movement of materials. The most common use of these radiotracers is at the well head for the measurement of flow rate for various purposes.

  5. Why is logging the most dangerous job in America? - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/finance/2017/10/23/why-is...

    Trees provide materials for our buildings and furniture; their sawdust becomes our paper; their fibers can be used to make asphalt. Heck, we even owe a debt of thanks to trees and the loggers who ...

  6. History of the lumber industry in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_lumber...

    The portable chain saw and other technological developments helped drive more efficient logging, but the proliferation of other building materials in the twentieth century saw the end of the rapidly rising demand of the previous century. In 1950, the United States produced 38 billion board feet of lumber, and that number remained fairly ...

  7. Log boom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_boom

    Log boom on St. Croix River in Maine, aerial photo taken in 1973 Timber marks on a log building in Sweden where they are called flottningsmärke. A log boom (sometimes called a log fence or log bag) is a barrier placed in a river, designed to collect and or contain floating logs timbered from nearby forests. The term is also used as a place ...

  8. Wood industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_industry

    In the narrow sense of the terms, wood, forest, forestry and timber/lumber industry appear to point to different sectors, in the industrialized, internationalized world, there is a tendency toward huge integrated businesses that cover the complete spectrum from silviculture and forestry in private primary or secondary forests or plantations via the logging process up to wood processing and ...

  9. Lumber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumber

    Lumber is a sustainable and environmentally friendly construction material that could replace modern building materials (e.g. concrete and steel) given its structural performance, capacity to fixate CO 2 and low energy demand during the manufacturing process. [43] Substituting lumber for concrete or steel avoids the carbon emissions of those ...