Is only 4% of original forest left in the US?
The 2009 video The Story of Stuff makes several rather incredible claims. For example:
Where I live, in the United States, we have less than 4% of our original forests left.
My gut feeling tells me to be skeptical of this number. Is it correct?
united-states environment
add a comment |
The 2009 video The Story of Stuff makes several rather incredible claims. For example:
Where I live, in the United States, we have less than 4% of our original forests left.
My gut feeling tells me to be skeptical of this number. Is it correct?
united-states environment
Folks, I nuked close to a hundred comments (here and on answers) debating the definition of "original". We really don't care about your favorite definition of it. We probably are not quite interested either if your find this claim misleading. It is what it is. If you have a better definition of original, write an answer, not a rant under an answer that uses a definition you disagree with. Thank you. There is space for different takes on this, be tolerant. Further definitions discussions will be nuked on sight.
– Sklivvz♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
The 2009 video The Story of Stuff makes several rather incredible claims. For example:
Where I live, in the United States, we have less than 4% of our original forests left.
My gut feeling tells me to be skeptical of this number. Is it correct?
united-states environment
The 2009 video The Story of Stuff makes several rather incredible claims. For example:
Where I live, in the United States, we have less than 4% of our original forests left.
My gut feeling tells me to be skeptical of this number. Is it correct?
united-states environment
united-states environment
edited Jan 11 at 11:15
Jishin Noben
asked Jan 11 at 3:07
Jishin NobenJishin Noben
360127
360127
Folks, I nuked close to a hundred comments (here and on answers) debating the definition of "original". We really don't care about your favorite definition of it. We probably are not quite interested either if your find this claim misleading. It is what it is. If you have a better definition of original, write an answer, not a rant under an answer that uses a definition you disagree with. Thank you. There is space for different takes on this, be tolerant. Further definitions discussions will be nuked on sight.
– Sklivvz♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
Folks, I nuked close to a hundred comments (here and on answers) debating the definition of "original". We really don't care about your favorite definition of it. We probably are not quite interested either if your find this claim misleading. It is what it is. If you have a better definition of original, write an answer, not a rant under an answer that uses a definition you disagree with. Thank you. There is space for different takes on this, be tolerant. Further definitions discussions will be nuked on sight.
– Sklivvz♦
2 days ago
Folks, I nuked close to a hundred comments (here and on answers) debating the definition of "original". We really don't care about your favorite definition of it. We probably are not quite interested either if your find this claim misleading. It is what it is. If you have a better definition of original, write an answer, not a rant under an answer that uses a definition you disagree with. Thank you. There is space for different takes on this, be tolerant. Further definitions discussions will be nuked on sight.
– Sklivvz♦
2 days ago
Folks, I nuked close to a hundred comments (here and on answers) debating the definition of "original". We really don't care about your favorite definition of it. We probably are not quite interested either if your find this claim misleading. It is what it is. If you have a better definition of original, write an answer, not a rant under an answer that uses a definition you disagree with. Thank you. There is space for different takes on this, be tolerant. Further definitions discussions will be nuked on sight.
– Sklivvz♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Yes, this figure is consistent with estimates from 20 years ago.
The 1995 paper Endangered Ecosystems of the United States:
A Preliminary Assessment of Loss and Degradation collates some relevant estimates from the literature in Appendix A.
50 United States
85% of original primary (virgin) forest destroyed by late 1980's (Postel and Ryan 1991).
90% loss of ancient (old-growth) forests (World Resources Institute 1992).
[...]
48 Conterminous States
ca. 95-98% of virgin forests destroyed by 1990 (estimated from map in Findley 1990 and
commonly estimated by other authors, e.g., Postel and Ryan 1991).
99% loss of primary (virgin) eastern deciduous forest (Allen and Jackson 1992).
It goes on to break the USA down into smaller regions, and cites consistent statistics for those - e.g.:
>99% loss of virgin or old-growth forests in New Hampshire (D. D. Sperduto, New
Hampshire Department of Resources and Economic Development, Natural Heritage
Inventory, Concord, N.H., personal communication).
This shows it is more than one or two papers making these nationwide estimates - they are shored up by several ecologists who have reached similar conclusions in different regions.
This article is concerned not only about ecosystems being paved over, but also loss in quality:
Ecosystems can be lost or impoverished in basically two ways. The most obvious kind of
loss is quantitative--the conversion of a native prairie to a corn field or to a parking lot.
Quantitative losses, in principle, can be measured easily by a decline in areal extent of a
discrete ecosystem type (i.e., one that can be mapped). The second kind of loss is
qualitative and involves a change or degradation in the structure, function, or composition
of an ecosystem (Franklin et al. 1981; Noss 1990). At some level of degradation, an
ecosystem ceases to be natural.
So, these figures do NOT represent clear-felling of these forests - the impacts may be more subtle.
However, as a literature review, it is dependent on the individual papers for their definitions of "original", "virgin", "old-growth" etc., and hence the translations in the quotes above.
I tried to follow up on some of the references to see how they used the terms. I had limited success. Ironically, the papers from the 1980s and 1990s are difficult to access, but a 1923 paper they cite is freely available online!
Reynolds, R. V., and A. H. Pierson. 1923. Lumber cut of the United States, 1870-1920.
USDA Bulletin 1119, Washington, D.C. is cited to support that
96% of virgin forests of northeastern and central states eliminated by 1920 (Reynolds and
Pierson 1923).
The cited bulletin, on page 8, explains:
The Northeast and Central States had each cut 96 per cent of their original areas of virgin timber. The Lakes States had cut 90 per cent, and the South was not far behind.
That bulletin is mainly concerned with the effect on the declining yields of ongoing timber production and its ability to serve markets after World War I, rather than the ecological issues.
11
Our etymology-loving friends assure me that "conterminous" and "coterminous" are both correct even though the spelling quoted here looks wrong to my eyes.
– Oddthinking♦
Jan 11 at 6:38
add a comment |
Entirely possible
I'm assuming that by "original forests" the video refers to old-growth forests, and that the point considered 100% is the total forest area of year 1630.
U.S. Forest Resource Facts and Historical Trends 1952-2012 provides a graph showing forest distribution by age:
As you can see, forests older than 150 years account for about 15-20% of western forests (which themselves constitute about a half of US forest land, see page 8 of the brochure). This brings us to 7-10% of present-day forests which have been growing for 150 years or longer. Since the total forest area shrunk from 1,023 million acres in 1630 to 766 million acres in 2012, this number corresponds to 5-7.5% of original forests in 1630.
According to Wikipedia, original hardwood forests needs to be at least 150 years old in order to develop old-growth characteristics in one or two generations of trees. There are other criteria which can disqualify a forest from being old-growth even if it's old enough, primarily significant human disturbance.
So, the upper estimate for old-growth US forests would be 7.5%. The lower estimate could be obtained by e.g. summing the area of old-growth US forests listed on Wikipedia which amount to some 20 million acres, or less than 2%. Thus the claimed 4% estimate seems perfectly reasonable.
add a comment |
According to the U.S. Forest Service publication U.S. Forest Resource Facts
and Historical Trends:
In 1630, the estimated area of U.S. forest land was
1,023 million acres or about 46 percent of the total
land area. Since 1630, about 256 million acres of forest
land have been converted to other uses
So 75% of the original forest land is still forest land.
However, much of the forest land has been cut at least once.
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Yes, this figure is consistent with estimates from 20 years ago.
The 1995 paper Endangered Ecosystems of the United States:
A Preliminary Assessment of Loss and Degradation collates some relevant estimates from the literature in Appendix A.
50 United States
85% of original primary (virgin) forest destroyed by late 1980's (Postel and Ryan 1991).
90% loss of ancient (old-growth) forests (World Resources Institute 1992).
[...]
48 Conterminous States
ca. 95-98% of virgin forests destroyed by 1990 (estimated from map in Findley 1990 and
commonly estimated by other authors, e.g., Postel and Ryan 1991).
99% loss of primary (virgin) eastern deciduous forest (Allen and Jackson 1992).
It goes on to break the USA down into smaller regions, and cites consistent statistics for those - e.g.:
>99% loss of virgin or old-growth forests in New Hampshire (D. D. Sperduto, New
Hampshire Department of Resources and Economic Development, Natural Heritage
Inventory, Concord, N.H., personal communication).
This shows it is more than one or two papers making these nationwide estimates - they are shored up by several ecologists who have reached similar conclusions in different regions.
This article is concerned not only about ecosystems being paved over, but also loss in quality:
Ecosystems can be lost or impoverished in basically two ways. The most obvious kind of
loss is quantitative--the conversion of a native prairie to a corn field or to a parking lot.
Quantitative losses, in principle, can be measured easily by a decline in areal extent of a
discrete ecosystem type (i.e., one that can be mapped). The second kind of loss is
qualitative and involves a change or degradation in the structure, function, or composition
of an ecosystem (Franklin et al. 1981; Noss 1990). At some level of degradation, an
ecosystem ceases to be natural.
So, these figures do NOT represent clear-felling of these forests - the impacts may be more subtle.
However, as a literature review, it is dependent on the individual papers for their definitions of "original", "virgin", "old-growth" etc., and hence the translations in the quotes above.
I tried to follow up on some of the references to see how they used the terms. I had limited success. Ironically, the papers from the 1980s and 1990s are difficult to access, but a 1923 paper they cite is freely available online!
Reynolds, R. V., and A. H. Pierson. 1923. Lumber cut of the United States, 1870-1920.
USDA Bulletin 1119, Washington, D.C. is cited to support that
96% of virgin forests of northeastern and central states eliminated by 1920 (Reynolds and
Pierson 1923).
The cited bulletin, on page 8, explains:
The Northeast and Central States had each cut 96 per cent of their original areas of virgin timber. The Lakes States had cut 90 per cent, and the South was not far behind.
That bulletin is mainly concerned with the effect on the declining yields of ongoing timber production and its ability to serve markets after World War I, rather than the ecological issues.
11
Our etymology-loving friends assure me that "conterminous" and "coterminous" are both correct even though the spelling quoted here looks wrong to my eyes.
– Oddthinking♦
Jan 11 at 6:38
add a comment |
Yes, this figure is consistent with estimates from 20 years ago.
The 1995 paper Endangered Ecosystems of the United States:
A Preliminary Assessment of Loss and Degradation collates some relevant estimates from the literature in Appendix A.
50 United States
85% of original primary (virgin) forest destroyed by late 1980's (Postel and Ryan 1991).
90% loss of ancient (old-growth) forests (World Resources Institute 1992).
[...]
48 Conterminous States
ca. 95-98% of virgin forests destroyed by 1990 (estimated from map in Findley 1990 and
commonly estimated by other authors, e.g., Postel and Ryan 1991).
99% loss of primary (virgin) eastern deciduous forest (Allen and Jackson 1992).
It goes on to break the USA down into smaller regions, and cites consistent statistics for those - e.g.:
>99% loss of virgin or old-growth forests in New Hampshire (D. D. Sperduto, New
Hampshire Department of Resources and Economic Development, Natural Heritage
Inventory, Concord, N.H., personal communication).
This shows it is more than one or two papers making these nationwide estimates - they are shored up by several ecologists who have reached similar conclusions in different regions.
This article is concerned not only about ecosystems being paved over, but also loss in quality:
Ecosystems can be lost or impoverished in basically two ways. The most obvious kind of
loss is quantitative--the conversion of a native prairie to a corn field or to a parking lot.
Quantitative losses, in principle, can be measured easily by a decline in areal extent of a
discrete ecosystem type (i.e., one that can be mapped). The second kind of loss is
qualitative and involves a change or degradation in the structure, function, or composition
of an ecosystem (Franklin et al. 1981; Noss 1990). At some level of degradation, an
ecosystem ceases to be natural.
So, these figures do NOT represent clear-felling of these forests - the impacts may be more subtle.
However, as a literature review, it is dependent on the individual papers for their definitions of "original", "virgin", "old-growth" etc., and hence the translations in the quotes above.
I tried to follow up on some of the references to see how they used the terms. I had limited success. Ironically, the papers from the 1980s and 1990s are difficult to access, but a 1923 paper they cite is freely available online!
Reynolds, R. V., and A. H. Pierson. 1923. Lumber cut of the United States, 1870-1920.
USDA Bulletin 1119, Washington, D.C. is cited to support that
96% of virgin forests of northeastern and central states eliminated by 1920 (Reynolds and
Pierson 1923).
The cited bulletin, on page 8, explains:
The Northeast and Central States had each cut 96 per cent of their original areas of virgin timber. The Lakes States had cut 90 per cent, and the South was not far behind.
That bulletin is mainly concerned with the effect on the declining yields of ongoing timber production and its ability to serve markets after World War I, rather than the ecological issues.
11
Our etymology-loving friends assure me that "conterminous" and "coterminous" are both correct even though the spelling quoted here looks wrong to my eyes.
– Oddthinking♦
Jan 11 at 6:38
add a comment |
Yes, this figure is consistent with estimates from 20 years ago.
The 1995 paper Endangered Ecosystems of the United States:
A Preliminary Assessment of Loss and Degradation collates some relevant estimates from the literature in Appendix A.
50 United States
85% of original primary (virgin) forest destroyed by late 1980's (Postel and Ryan 1991).
90% loss of ancient (old-growth) forests (World Resources Institute 1992).
[...]
48 Conterminous States
ca. 95-98% of virgin forests destroyed by 1990 (estimated from map in Findley 1990 and
commonly estimated by other authors, e.g., Postel and Ryan 1991).
99% loss of primary (virgin) eastern deciduous forest (Allen and Jackson 1992).
It goes on to break the USA down into smaller regions, and cites consistent statistics for those - e.g.:
>99% loss of virgin or old-growth forests in New Hampshire (D. D. Sperduto, New
Hampshire Department of Resources and Economic Development, Natural Heritage
Inventory, Concord, N.H., personal communication).
This shows it is more than one or two papers making these nationwide estimates - they are shored up by several ecologists who have reached similar conclusions in different regions.
This article is concerned not only about ecosystems being paved over, but also loss in quality:
Ecosystems can be lost or impoverished in basically two ways. The most obvious kind of
loss is quantitative--the conversion of a native prairie to a corn field or to a parking lot.
Quantitative losses, in principle, can be measured easily by a decline in areal extent of a
discrete ecosystem type (i.e., one that can be mapped). The second kind of loss is
qualitative and involves a change or degradation in the structure, function, or composition
of an ecosystem (Franklin et al. 1981; Noss 1990). At some level of degradation, an
ecosystem ceases to be natural.
So, these figures do NOT represent clear-felling of these forests - the impacts may be more subtle.
However, as a literature review, it is dependent on the individual papers for their definitions of "original", "virgin", "old-growth" etc., and hence the translations in the quotes above.
I tried to follow up on some of the references to see how they used the terms. I had limited success. Ironically, the papers from the 1980s and 1990s are difficult to access, but a 1923 paper they cite is freely available online!
Reynolds, R. V., and A. H. Pierson. 1923. Lumber cut of the United States, 1870-1920.
USDA Bulletin 1119, Washington, D.C. is cited to support that
96% of virgin forests of northeastern and central states eliminated by 1920 (Reynolds and
Pierson 1923).
The cited bulletin, on page 8, explains:
The Northeast and Central States had each cut 96 per cent of their original areas of virgin timber. The Lakes States had cut 90 per cent, and the South was not far behind.
That bulletin is mainly concerned with the effect on the declining yields of ongoing timber production and its ability to serve markets after World War I, rather than the ecological issues.
Yes, this figure is consistent with estimates from 20 years ago.
The 1995 paper Endangered Ecosystems of the United States:
A Preliminary Assessment of Loss and Degradation collates some relevant estimates from the literature in Appendix A.
50 United States
85% of original primary (virgin) forest destroyed by late 1980's (Postel and Ryan 1991).
90% loss of ancient (old-growth) forests (World Resources Institute 1992).
[...]
48 Conterminous States
ca. 95-98% of virgin forests destroyed by 1990 (estimated from map in Findley 1990 and
commonly estimated by other authors, e.g., Postel and Ryan 1991).
99% loss of primary (virgin) eastern deciduous forest (Allen and Jackson 1992).
It goes on to break the USA down into smaller regions, and cites consistent statistics for those - e.g.:
>99% loss of virgin or old-growth forests in New Hampshire (D. D. Sperduto, New
Hampshire Department of Resources and Economic Development, Natural Heritage
Inventory, Concord, N.H., personal communication).
This shows it is more than one or two papers making these nationwide estimates - they are shored up by several ecologists who have reached similar conclusions in different regions.
This article is concerned not only about ecosystems being paved over, but also loss in quality:
Ecosystems can be lost or impoverished in basically two ways. The most obvious kind of
loss is quantitative--the conversion of a native prairie to a corn field or to a parking lot.
Quantitative losses, in principle, can be measured easily by a decline in areal extent of a
discrete ecosystem type (i.e., one that can be mapped). The second kind of loss is
qualitative and involves a change or degradation in the structure, function, or composition
of an ecosystem (Franklin et al. 1981; Noss 1990). At some level of degradation, an
ecosystem ceases to be natural.
So, these figures do NOT represent clear-felling of these forests - the impacts may be more subtle.
However, as a literature review, it is dependent on the individual papers for their definitions of "original", "virgin", "old-growth" etc., and hence the translations in the quotes above.
I tried to follow up on some of the references to see how they used the terms. I had limited success. Ironically, the papers from the 1980s and 1990s are difficult to access, but a 1923 paper they cite is freely available online!
Reynolds, R. V., and A. H. Pierson. 1923. Lumber cut of the United States, 1870-1920.
USDA Bulletin 1119, Washington, D.C. is cited to support that
96% of virgin forests of northeastern and central states eliminated by 1920 (Reynolds and
Pierson 1923).
The cited bulletin, on page 8, explains:
The Northeast and Central States had each cut 96 per cent of their original areas of virgin timber. The Lakes States had cut 90 per cent, and the South was not far behind.
That bulletin is mainly concerned with the effect on the declining yields of ongoing timber production and its ability to serve markets after World War I, rather than the ecological issues.
edited Jan 11 at 22:18
answered Jan 11 at 5:14
Oddthinking♦Oddthinking
101k31419525
101k31419525
11
Our etymology-loving friends assure me that "conterminous" and "coterminous" are both correct even though the spelling quoted here looks wrong to my eyes.
– Oddthinking♦
Jan 11 at 6:38
add a comment |
11
Our etymology-loving friends assure me that "conterminous" and "coterminous" are both correct even though the spelling quoted here looks wrong to my eyes.
– Oddthinking♦
Jan 11 at 6:38
11
11
Our etymology-loving friends assure me that "conterminous" and "coterminous" are both correct even though the spelling quoted here looks wrong to my eyes.
– Oddthinking♦
Jan 11 at 6:38
Our etymology-loving friends assure me that "conterminous" and "coterminous" are both correct even though the spelling quoted here looks wrong to my eyes.
– Oddthinking♦
Jan 11 at 6:38
add a comment |
Entirely possible
I'm assuming that by "original forests" the video refers to old-growth forests, and that the point considered 100% is the total forest area of year 1630.
U.S. Forest Resource Facts and Historical Trends 1952-2012 provides a graph showing forest distribution by age:
As you can see, forests older than 150 years account for about 15-20% of western forests (which themselves constitute about a half of US forest land, see page 8 of the brochure). This brings us to 7-10% of present-day forests which have been growing for 150 years or longer. Since the total forest area shrunk from 1,023 million acres in 1630 to 766 million acres in 2012, this number corresponds to 5-7.5% of original forests in 1630.
According to Wikipedia, original hardwood forests needs to be at least 150 years old in order to develop old-growth characteristics in one or two generations of trees. There are other criteria which can disqualify a forest from being old-growth even if it's old enough, primarily significant human disturbance.
So, the upper estimate for old-growth US forests would be 7.5%. The lower estimate could be obtained by e.g. summing the area of old-growth US forests listed on Wikipedia which amount to some 20 million acres, or less than 2%. Thus the claimed 4% estimate seems perfectly reasonable.
add a comment |
Entirely possible
I'm assuming that by "original forests" the video refers to old-growth forests, and that the point considered 100% is the total forest area of year 1630.
U.S. Forest Resource Facts and Historical Trends 1952-2012 provides a graph showing forest distribution by age:
As you can see, forests older than 150 years account for about 15-20% of western forests (which themselves constitute about a half of US forest land, see page 8 of the brochure). This brings us to 7-10% of present-day forests which have been growing for 150 years or longer. Since the total forest area shrunk from 1,023 million acres in 1630 to 766 million acres in 2012, this number corresponds to 5-7.5% of original forests in 1630.
According to Wikipedia, original hardwood forests needs to be at least 150 years old in order to develop old-growth characteristics in one or two generations of trees. There are other criteria which can disqualify a forest from being old-growth even if it's old enough, primarily significant human disturbance.
So, the upper estimate for old-growth US forests would be 7.5%. The lower estimate could be obtained by e.g. summing the area of old-growth US forests listed on Wikipedia which amount to some 20 million acres, or less than 2%. Thus the claimed 4% estimate seems perfectly reasonable.
add a comment |
Entirely possible
I'm assuming that by "original forests" the video refers to old-growth forests, and that the point considered 100% is the total forest area of year 1630.
U.S. Forest Resource Facts and Historical Trends 1952-2012 provides a graph showing forest distribution by age:
As you can see, forests older than 150 years account for about 15-20% of western forests (which themselves constitute about a half of US forest land, see page 8 of the brochure). This brings us to 7-10% of present-day forests which have been growing for 150 years or longer. Since the total forest area shrunk from 1,023 million acres in 1630 to 766 million acres in 2012, this number corresponds to 5-7.5% of original forests in 1630.
According to Wikipedia, original hardwood forests needs to be at least 150 years old in order to develop old-growth characteristics in one or two generations of trees. There are other criteria which can disqualify a forest from being old-growth even if it's old enough, primarily significant human disturbance.
So, the upper estimate for old-growth US forests would be 7.5%. The lower estimate could be obtained by e.g. summing the area of old-growth US forests listed on Wikipedia which amount to some 20 million acres, or less than 2%. Thus the claimed 4% estimate seems perfectly reasonable.
Entirely possible
I'm assuming that by "original forests" the video refers to old-growth forests, and that the point considered 100% is the total forest area of year 1630.
U.S. Forest Resource Facts and Historical Trends 1952-2012 provides a graph showing forest distribution by age:
As you can see, forests older than 150 years account for about 15-20% of western forests (which themselves constitute about a half of US forest land, see page 8 of the brochure). This brings us to 7-10% of present-day forests which have been growing for 150 years or longer. Since the total forest area shrunk from 1,023 million acres in 1630 to 766 million acres in 2012, this number corresponds to 5-7.5% of original forests in 1630.
According to Wikipedia, original hardwood forests needs to be at least 150 years old in order to develop old-growth characteristics in one or two generations of trees. There are other criteria which can disqualify a forest from being old-growth even if it's old enough, primarily significant human disturbance.
So, the upper estimate for old-growth US forests would be 7.5%. The lower estimate could be obtained by e.g. summing the area of old-growth US forests listed on Wikipedia which amount to some 20 million acres, or less than 2%. Thus the claimed 4% estimate seems perfectly reasonable.
edited Jan 11 at 13:09
answered Jan 11 at 12:56
Dmitry GrigoryevDmitry Grigoryev
1,224416
1,224416
add a comment |
add a comment |
According to the U.S. Forest Service publication U.S. Forest Resource Facts
and Historical Trends:
In 1630, the estimated area of U.S. forest land was
1,023 million acres or about 46 percent of the total
land area. Since 1630, about 256 million acres of forest
land have been converted to other uses
So 75% of the original forest land is still forest land.
However, much of the forest land has been cut at least once.
add a comment |
According to the U.S. Forest Service publication U.S. Forest Resource Facts
and Historical Trends:
In 1630, the estimated area of U.S. forest land was
1,023 million acres or about 46 percent of the total
land area. Since 1630, about 256 million acres of forest
land have been converted to other uses
So 75% of the original forest land is still forest land.
However, much of the forest land has been cut at least once.
add a comment |
According to the U.S. Forest Service publication U.S. Forest Resource Facts
and Historical Trends:
In 1630, the estimated area of U.S. forest land was
1,023 million acres or about 46 percent of the total
land area. Since 1630, about 256 million acres of forest
land have been converted to other uses
So 75% of the original forest land is still forest land.
However, much of the forest land has been cut at least once.
According to the U.S. Forest Service publication U.S. Forest Resource Facts
and Historical Trends:
In 1630, the estimated area of U.S. forest land was
1,023 million acres or about 46 percent of the total
land area. Since 1630, about 256 million acres of forest
land have been converted to other uses
So 75% of the original forest land is still forest land.
However, much of the forest land has been cut at least once.
answered Jan 11 at 12:03
DavePhDDavePhD
75.7k19324349
75.7k19324349
add a comment |
add a comment |
Folks, I nuked close to a hundred comments (here and on answers) debating the definition of "original". We really don't care about your favorite definition of it. We probably are not quite interested either if your find this claim misleading. It is what it is. If you have a better definition of original, write an answer, not a rant under an answer that uses a definition you disagree with. Thank you. There is space for different takes on this, be tolerant. Further definitions discussions will be nuked on sight.
– Sklivvz♦
2 days ago