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  2. Underwater logging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underwater_logging

    Logs with a higher density than the density of water would sink. [2] Other logs would get caught in jams, sloughs, or floods, and become lodged in the riverbed. Such logs were often known as "sinkers" or "deadheads." Loggers attempted to reduce the number of logs which remained in the river in order to maximize profits, but some losses were ...

  3. Logging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logging

    In the early days, felled logs were transported using simple methods such as rivers to float tree trunks downstream to sawmills or paper mills. This practice, known as log driving or timber rafting, was the cheapest and most common. Some logs, due to high resin content, would sink and were known as deadheads.

  4. Log driving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_driving

    Floating logs down a river worked well for the most desirable pine timber, because it floated well. But hardwoods were more dense, and weren't buoyant enough to be easily driven, and some pines weren't near drivable streams. Log driving became increasingly unnecessary with the development of railroads and the use of trucks on logging roads ...

  5. Looming and similar refraction phenomena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Looming_and_similar...

    Looming of the Canadian coast as seen from Rochester, New York, on April 16, 1871. Looming is the most noticeable and most often observed of these refraction phenomena. It is an abnormally large refraction of the object that increases the apparent elevation of the distant objects and sometimes allows an observer to see objects that are located below the horizon under normal conditions.

  6. Log pond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_pond

    A "full deck" of logs awaiting the mill. A log pond is a small natural lake or reservoir used for storage of wooden logs in readiness for milling at a sawmill.Although some mill ponds served this purpose for water-powered sawmills, steam-powered sawmills used log ponds for transportation of logs near the mill; and did not require the elevation drop of watermill reservoirs.

  7. Bitter cold in forecast: December set for 'coldest start' in ...

    www.aol.com/bitter-cold-forecast-december-set...

    That Arctic air will also make its chilliness felt in the Great Lakes and Northeast U.S., which are also getting hit with a lake effect snow event, leading to some cases of dangerous snow ...

  8. Brr! Winter adds an old-school challenge to the CFP. Visiting ...

    www.aol.com/brr-winter-adds-old-school-170516014...

    We practice in the morning, still a chill, as cold as it will be around this area. And at the end of the day, you get between the white lines, weather doesn’t matter. The temperature doesn’t.

  9. Splash dam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splash_dam

    A splash dam was a temporary wooden dam used to raise the water level in streams to float logs downstream to sawmills. [1] By impounding water and allowing it to be released on the log drive's schedule, these dams allowed many more logs to be brought to market than the natural flow of the stream allowed.