Annual Report of the Forest Commission of the State of New York, Volume 2The Commission, 1887 - Forests and forestry "Compendium of laws relative to the Adirondack wilderness from 1774-1894": 1893, v. 2. |
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Page 17
... leaves , and , cutting off the tender leaves , they make a passageway between them and the shoot , which they line with white silk . When disturbed they crawl out of their silken reatreat and let themselves down to the ground by a ...
... leaves , and , cutting off the tender leaves , they make a passageway between them and the shoot , which they line with white silk . When disturbed they crawl out of their silken reatreat and let themselves down to the ground by a ...
Page 29
... leaf . " That was probably the earliest forest legislation in this country . In 1650 the Director and Council of the New Netherlands , acting for the West India Com- pany , granted to " freemen the liberty to cut and draw from the ...
... leaf . " That was probably the earliest forest legislation in this country . In 1650 the Director and Council of the New Netherlands , acting for the West India Com- pany , granted to " freemen the liberty to cut and draw from the ...
Page 34
... leaves of trees , so often found in conjunction with works of primitive art , in the boggy soil of districts where no forests appear to have existed within the era through which written annals reach ; from ancient historical records ...
... leaves of trees , so often found in conjunction with works of primitive art , in the boggy soil of districts where no forests appear to have existed within the era through which written annals reach ; from ancient historical records ...
Page 38
... leaves for bedding for animals ; gathering of sticks and fallen limbs for fuel ; the relative value of woods for fuel ; the irrigation of timber lands ; investigation of the relation of forests to the drainage of the soil , and many ...
... leaves for bedding for animals ; gathering of sticks and fallen limbs for fuel ; the relative value of woods for fuel ; the irrigation of timber lands ; investigation of the relation of forests to the drainage of the soil , and many ...
Page 39
... leaf is swept up and every twig carefully gathered and put to use ; nothing is wasted . It is evidently thought that the forest leaves are more valuable for litter than as a covering for the roots of the trees . Those who ride through ...
... leaf is swept up and every twig carefully gathered and put to use ; nothing is wasted . It is evidently thought that the forest leaves are more valuable for litter than as a covering for the roots of the trees . Those who ride through ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres Action commenced Adirondack agricultural Albany annual bark Beaver kill birch branch brooks Catskill region cent clearing Commissioners cords of wood corner Delaware county Delaware river denuded destruction districts droughts Ellenville Esopus creek fact feet fires floods flow Forest Commission forest lands forest preserve forestry Greene county growth hard wood Hardenburgh headwaters hemlock hoop-poles hoops Hudson river Hunter inches islands in Lake Jerseyfield Patent Kingston Lake George Land Office Livingston Manor logs manufacturing maple miles mills moisture number of trees Palenville pine places planting ponds Railroad rain rainfall ridge road Rondout creek says Schoharie county Schoharie creek Shandaken Shawangunk Shawangunk kill shipped slopes soil springs spruce streams Sullivan county summer supply tanneries temperature tion town of Hardenburgh town of Rockland town of Wawarsing township tract trespass on lot Ulster and Delaware Ulster county valley vicinity water power water-shed Willewemoc winds woodland York
Popular passages
Page 152 - The lands of the State, now owned or hereafter acquired, constituting the forest preserve as now fixed by law, shall be forever kept as wild forest lands. They shall not be leased, sold or exchanged, or be taken by any corporation, public or private, nor shall the timber thereon be sold, removed or destroyed.
Page 35 - And this devastation is now become epidemical, that, unless some favourable expedient offer itself, and a way be seriously and speedily resolved upon for a future store, one of the most glorious and considerable bulwarks of this nation, will, within a short time, be totally wanting to it.
Page 69 - France, one can form no conception of those parched mountain gorges where not even a bush can be found to shelter a bird, where, at most, the wanderer sees in summer here and there a withered lavender, where all the springs are dried up, and where a dead silence, hardly broken by even the hum of an insect, prevails.
Page 69 - Vast deposits of flinty pebbles, many feet in thickness, which have rolled down and spread far over the plain, surround large trees, bury even their tops, and rise above them, leaving to the husbandman no longer a ray of hope. One can imagine no sadder spectacle than the deep fissures in the flanks of the mountains, which seem to have burst forth in eruption to cover the plains with their ruins. These gorges, under the influence of the sun which cracks and shivers to fragments the very rocks, and...
Page 152 - ... shall prevent or operate to prevent the free use of any road, stream or- water as the same may have been heretofore used, or as may be reasonably required in the prosecution of any lawful business.
Page 151 - All the lands now owned or which may hereafter be acquired by the State of New York, within the counties of Clinton, excepting the towns of Altona and Dannemora, Essex, Franklin, Fulton, Hamilton, Herkimer, Lewis, Saratoga, St. Lawrence, Warren, Washington, Greene, Ulster, and Sullivan, shall constitute and be known as the forest preserve.
Page 85 - It is certain that a desolation like that which has overwhelmed many once beautiful and fertile regions of Europe, awaits an important part of the territory of the United States, unless prompt measures are taken to check the action of destructive causes already in operation.
Page 48 - ... life. As the forests are destroyed, the springs which flowed from the woods, and, consequently, the greater water-courses fed by them, diminish both in number and volume.
Page 49 - ... due in each case, says Senator Torrelli, of Italy, to the clearings around their feeders. A remarkable illustration of the fact that the clearing of hilly countries is likely to result in the complete failing of springs is given by Mr. Ney, who states that in the Provence, after all the olive trees, which there formed regular forests, had been frozen in 1822 and cut down, a great number of springs failed totally ; and...
Page 152 - ... powers now vested in the commissioners of the land office and in the comptroller, as to such of the said lands as are now owned by the State.