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- Newsgroups: rec.woodworking
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!gatech!news.ans.net!nynexst.com!fun!smierch
- From: smierch@fun.com (Edward Smierciak)
- Subject: Re: "Rainforest Destruction Has Many Victi
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.193210.5844@nynexst.com>
- Sender: news@nynexst.com (For News purposes)
- Reply-To: smierch@fun.com
- Organization: Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- References: <1992Dec22.173809.20730@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 92 19:32:10 GMT
- Lines: 41
-
- In article 20730@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com, billn@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com (bill nelson) writes:
- >gph@hpcc01.corp.hp.com (G. Paul Houtz) writes:
- >:
- >: Remember the example of Brazilian rosewood. By only sustainably grown
- >: tropical hardwoods, or else use North American hardwoods like oak, maple,
- >: walnut and cherry.
- >
- >In the case of Brazil - the rainforest is being cut at the rate of 0.5%
- >per year. This is an easily sustainable level. The problem is the erosion
- >that may occur - they don't seem to try to minimize it. Also, most of the
- >cutting is for growing crops, not for the wood. Much of the wood is simply
- >burned where it was cut.
- >
- >So, do you think we are doing any better in the US? I would argue that we
- >are doing worse. Our hardwood forests are rapidly disappearing - much more
- >quickly than most foreign countries.
- >
- >Bill
-
- There are more trees east of the Mississippi today than there were in 1850,
- and the number continues to increase. And those trees are nearly all hardwoods.
- The reason for this is:
-
- 1) huge tracts of land surrounding major cities were, 100 years
- ago, cleared farmland that supplied those cities with fresh
- meat, produce, and dairy products. Around the turn of the
- century, they began to turn into wooded suburbs.
-
- 2) tens of thousands of farms from Maine to Georgia have reverted
- to forest land because trying to farm in the rocky/depleted/hilly
- soil of the eastern U.S. just isn't competive with the economics
- of farming in Iowa. So the trees have returned.
-
- The problem in this country is the clear-cutting of old-growth fir/pine/spruce
- in the NW U.S. and in Alaska.
-
-
- ---
-
- Ed Smierciak
-
-