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  2. Sod roof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sod_roof

    Trees will soon destroy a sod roof. Photo: Roede. A sod roof, or turf roof, is a traditional Scandinavian type of green roof covered with sod on top of several layers of birch bark on gently sloping wooden roof boards. Until the late 19th century, it was the most common roof on rural log houses in Norway and large parts of the rest of Scandinavia.

  3. Birch-bark roof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch-bark_roof

    A birch-bark roof (in Finnish: malkakatto or tuohikatto) is a roof construction traditional in Finland and Norway for farmhouses and farm buildings built from logs. The birch-bark roof was the prevailing roof type in rural Finland up until the 1860s, when it was replaced by the use of other materials such as metal sheeting and later roofing felt.

  4. Slab hut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slab_hut

    Period: c. 1790–1920. Materials: Timber, bark, mud, clay, stone, Galvanized iron. Uses: dwellings, shops, farm outbuildings. A slab hut is a kind of dwelling or shed made from slabs of split or sawn timber. It was a common form of construction used by settlers in Australia and New Zealand during their nations' colonial periods.

  5. Birch bark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch_bark

    In Scandinavia and Finland, it was used as the substratum of sod roofs and birch-bark roofs, for making boxes, casks and buckets, fishing implements, and shoes (as used by the Egtved Girl) similar to bast shoes. In Russia, many birch bark manuscripts have survived from the Middle Ages. Birch bark knife handles are popular tools to be made ...

  6. Earth lodge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_lodge

    Earth lodge. An earth lodge is a semi-subterranean building covered partially or completely with earth, best known from the Native American cultures of the Great Plains and Eastern Woodlands. Most earth lodges are circular in construction with a dome-like roof, often with a central or slightly offset smoke hole at the apex of the dome. [1]

  7. Dugout (shelter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dugout_(shelter)

    A dugout or dug-out, also known as a pit-house or earth lodge, is a shelter for humans or domesticated animals and livestock based on a hole or depression dug into the ground. Dugouts can be fully recessed into the earth, with a flat roof covered by ground, or dug into a hillside. They can also be semi-recessed, with a constructed wood or sod ...

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