158 CATALOGUE OF THE PHOTOGRAPHIC COLLECTION AT THE 



FOREST RESEARCH INSTITUTE. 



, — Foreign 

 photoSi 



United 



States — 

 condd. 



Index title. 



United States — 

 conoid. 



Subject. 



Characteristic association of 

 big trees {Sequoia Wash- 

 ingtoniana) -with, white 

 fir {Ahies concolor) and 

 sugar pine {Piniis Lanib- 

 ertiana). The big trees 

 are 280 to 300 feet in 

 height with a diameter of 

 12 to 20 feet. They are 

 among the largest big 

 trees of the famed "GSrant 

 forest " Sequoia National 

 Park, California. 



White oaks, Eastern Ten- 

 nessee. 



Second growth saplings of 

 chestnuts, white oak, 

 chestnut oak {Quercus 

 prinus), locust {Bobinia 

 fsevdacacia) and black 

 cherry {Firms serotina), 

 40 years after cutting. 

 Three hundred aapUngs 

 to an acre. Buncombe 

 County, North Carolina. 



Culled forest of tuUp 

 tree and hemlock {Tsuga 

 canadensis), 50,000 feet 

 per acre, Graham County, 

 North Carolina. 



Three average sized big 

 trees, sugar pine and 

 white fir. The big tree 

 on the right is 35 feet in 

 circumference, the tree in 

 the centre is ASJ feet, and 

 the one on the left is 20 

 feet in circumference. 

 General Grant National 

 Park, California. 



" Undercut " made to 

 fell a big tree, diameter 

 of trunlc 12 feet, Sierra 

 forest reserve, Cali- 

 fornia. 



Photo- 

 grapher's 

 name. 



Prhit 



No. 



K179. 



Negative 

 No. 



K180. 

 K181. 



K182. 



K183. 



K184. 



Remabks. 



