Publications and Products
Science Findings: 2002 To
communicate our most significant findings to people who make and
influence decisions about land management, we select up to 12 projects
each year to highlight in a monthly publication.
This series, Science Findings, is available in PDF (To view and
print PDF documents, you need the free Adobe
Systems Inc. Acrobat Reader). Most issues also are available
in hardcopy, although a few of the earlier ones are out of stock.
If you would like copies, just contact us at pnw_pnwpubs@fs.fed.us
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2002 | 2001
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Issue 49
(December 2002) Geology as destiny: cold waters run deep in western
Oregon, by Gordon Grant
Issue 48
(November 2002) Volume, value, and thinning: logs for the future,
by David D. Marshall and Robert O. Curtis
Issue 47
(October 2002) Postfire logging: Is it beneficial to a forest?
by Jim McIver and Roger Ottmar
Issue 46
(September 2002) When the forest burns: making sense of fire history
west of the Cascades, by Fred Swanson
Issue 45
(July 2002) Changing the scale of our thinking: landscape-level
learning, by Thomas Spies
Issue 44
(May 2002) Is carbon storage enough? Can plants adapt? New questions
in climate change research, by Ronald P. Neilson
Issue 43
(April 2002) Canopy gaps and dead tree dynamics: poking holes in
the forest, by Andrew N. Gray and Thomas A. Spies
Issue 42
(March 2002) Dead wood all around us: think regionally to manage
locally, by Janet Ohmann and Karen Waddell
Issue 41
(February 2002) Soggy soils and sustainability: forested wetlands
in southeast Alaska, by David D'Amore
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