152 
Lumbering—cont’d. 
in relation to future crops of 
spruce, 31-32, 36-37. 
Increased growth after, (with 
tables), 39-45. 
Working plan of, 105-113. 
McClintock, W., 2. 
Management of forests, see Forest 
management. 
Maple, Hard. 
Habit of, 26. 
in Ne-Ha-Sa-Ne Park, §, 7. 
Market demand for, 87. 
fs value of, 116. 
Per cent. of unsound trees 
among, 114. 
Proportion of, in different situa- 
tions, 9, II, 13, 15. 
Rate of growth of, 26, 95-96. 
Shade tolerance of, 6, 20, 26. 
Yield of, 89, 90, 92, 115. 
Maple, Soft. 
Habit of, 28. 
in Ne-Ha-Sa-Ne Park, 5, 7. 
Proportion of, in different situa- 
tions, 9, II, 13, 15. 
Rate of growth of, 28, 96. 
Shade tolerance of, 6. 
Market value of different woods, 116. 
Marsh lands, see Swamp lands. 
Measurement of standing timber, 
59-60. 
Measurement of land, 59-60. 
Merchantable timber in Ne-Ha-Sa- 
Ne Park, 114, 115. 
Mixed forest. 
Compared with pure forest, 110. 
Determining factors in composi- 
tion of, 22-23. 
Spruce in, 23. 
INDEX 
Mosle, F., 2. 
Moynehan, Patrick, VII, 46. 
Natural forest, see Virgin forest. 
Ne-Ha-Sa-Ne Park. 
Amount of merchantable timber 
in, 114—115. 
Area of, 59, 98. 
Composition of forest in, (with 
table), 5-7. 
Condition of, 4, 102. 
Lakes in, 98, 108-109. 
Topography and climate, 98-100. 
Transportation facilities in, ror. 
Watersheds in, 108-109. 
New York State Assembly, Spe- 
cial committee of. Final re- 
port, 46. 
Number of dead trees per acre, 
(with table), 77-78. 
Number of merchantable trees 
per acre, 90-92. 
Number of small trees, other than 
spruce, per acre, 93-94. 
Number of trees, per acre, 35, 62- 
64, 66-72. 
Olmsted, F. E., 2. 
Picea mariana, see Spruce, Black. 
Pinchot and Graves. ‘‘ White 
pine,”’ 89. 
Pine, White. 
Habit of, 28-29. 
in Ne-Ha-Sa-Ne Park, §, 7, 28. 
Market value of, 116. 
Proportion of, in different situa- 
tions, 9, II, 13, 15. 
Shade tolerance of, 6, 29. 
Vield of, 89, 90, 92, 115. 
Pinus strobus, see Pine, White. 
Poplars, 5, 6. 
Pressler’s Zuwachsborer, 95. 
