This report summarizes survey information collected in 1963 

 on the 1962 output of roundwood products from the forests of Arizona 

 and New Mexico. The term "roundwood" designates products that 

 were received at plants "in the round" (as logs or bolts) for the first 

 steps in manufacture. Accordingly, the data presented here do not 

 include pulpwood made from sawmill or veneer plant residues 

 (slabs, edgings, trim ends, shavings, sawdust, lathe cores), nor do 

 they include fuelwood or any other items (industrial or domestic) 

 made from these residues. 



The detailed results of this survey are presented in a series of 

 tables. The highlights of 1962 production and major production 

 trends between 1952 and 1962 are discussed. Data for saw log output 

 are presented in more detail than for other products because of the 

 predominance of saw logs in the States' total production. 



Forest products surveys in the Rocky Mountain States and 

 western South Dakota are part of the Intermountain Forest and Range 

 Experiment Station's program for periodic appraisals of the forest 

 situation. In western South Dakota, eastern Wyoming, Colorado, 

 New Mexico, and Arizona, products surveys and other phases of 

 Forest Survey work are conducted cooperatively with the Rocky 

 Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Fort Collins, 

 Colorado. 



