Southeast region 
Softwoods 
Sawlogs 
Veneer logs 
Pulpwood 
Other 
Fuelwood 
al 
Hardwoods 
South Central region 
Sawlogs 
Veneer logs 
Pulpwood 
Other 
Fuelwood 
Million dollars 
ee 
1,000 1,200 
800 1,000 1,200 
Million dollars 
Figure 1.4—Value at local points of delivery of roundwood timber products in the South, by region and species group, 1984 
Among individual States, the leading producers of round- 
wood in 1984 were Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and 
North Carolina. Together, these four States accounted for 
half the total roundwood output in the South. The estimated 
value of these products at local points of delivery was over 
$1 billion in Georgia, $740 million in Alabama, $590 mil- 
lion in Mississippi, and $570 million in North Carolina. 
For Texas, Louisiana, and Virginia also, the value of round- 
wood products exceeded a half billion dollars. 
Georgia alone produced some 470 million cubic feet of 
softwood pulpwood and 450 million cubic feet of softwood 
sawlogs, about a fifth of the South’s total output of these 
products. Alabama and Mississippi each had a combined 
softwood sawlog and veneer log harvest of over 300 million 
cubic feet. Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, North Carolina, and 
South Carolina each produced more than 200 million cubic 
feet. Production figures for Texas and Louisiana included 
relatively high proportions of veneer logs. Behind Georgia, 
the leading producers of softwood pulpwood were Alabama, 
Florida, and Louisiana. 
For hardwood roundwood, Virginia, North Carolina, and 
Alabama had the highest output, producing about 350 mil- 
lion cubic feet each. Alabama produced over 215 million cu- 
bic feet of hardwood pulpwood, one-fifth of the South’s 
total. Among the other States, Tennessee was a major source 
of hardwood sawlogs, Georgia of hardwood veneer, and 
Mississippi of hardwood pulpwood. 
