Dictionary:
log·ging (lô'gĭng, lŏg'ĭng) ![]() |
The work or business of felling and trimming trees and transporting the logs to a mill.
Dictionary:
log·ging (lô'gĭng, lŏg'ĭng) ![]() |
The work or business of felling and trimming trees and transporting the logs to a mill.
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| Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Logging |
Those processes required to bring all or a portion of a tree from the stump to the mill facilities. Logging (tree harvesting) processes are clustered into tree conversion, woods transport (off-road transportation), landing operations (wood transfer), transport from landing to mill facility (truck, water, or rail), and unloading at the mill facility (wood transfer). See also Paper; Plywood; Wood products.
The start of harvesting is the cutting down of trees with hand tools, chain saws, or mechanized felling machines. The tree may be further cut into suitable lengths (bucking), or it may be transported whole or in tree-lengths. Tree products may be allocated during bucking with the aid of a computer on the felling and bucking machine or by a faller using a log order list or a hand-held computer to help decide the log products to make. The objective of the tree falling operation is to fell the tree with minimum damage, to avoid damaging surrounding trees, to minimize soil and water impacts, and to position the tree or logs for the next phase of harvesting. The goal of bucking is to produce the most valuable assortment of logs from the tree while considering the physical capability of the skidding (log-dragging), yarding (moving of logs to a landing), or forwarding (log-carrying) equipment.
Logs in lengths from about 1 to 10 m (3 to 33 ft) or other products must be transported from the stump to a place where they are further processed (often called a landing). In some cases, entire trees are pulled to the landing. Humans, animals, crawler tractors and wheeled skidders (machines that drag the logs), forwarders (machines that carry loads of logs), farm tractors with winches or trailers, cable logging systems, balloons, or even helicopters transport logs and tree products to landings.
At the landing, the logs or trees may be stored or directly processed for transport. They may be loaded onto trucks, trains, barges, or ships, or prepared for water transport. Whole trees brought to a landing may have limbs and bark removed, and then be chipped and loaded into chip vans for transport to a pulp mill. Tree-length segments may be delimbed and bucked into logs for different market destinations. Trees may be shredded, chunked, or processed through machines for use as fuel. The allocation process may include measurement by volume or weight of the products.
Because logs are heavy, they are normally loaded mechanically, although some regions still use manual or animal methods involving ramps. There are two general types of mechanical loaders used at roadside: swingboom loaders with grapples, and front-end loaders fitted with a log fork or grapple. Both are mobile, mounted on tracked or rubber-tired carriers. Forwarders usually unload themselves either into log decks for storage or onto setout trailers.
Trucks are most commonly used to transport log products to mill facilities. They vary from small vehicles hauling 5–8 tons on straight beds to large specialized off-highway vehicles hauling 50 tons or more. A variety of truck trailers are used depending upon the type of product. Trees or long logs may be loaded onto pole trailers. Short logs, 2.5 m (8 ft) and less, are often stacked sideways on flat-bed trailers with bunks. Chips or flakes are hauled in specially designed chip vans. Water transport in barges, as log rafts, and as free-floating logs is used in some areas.
Log products can be unloaded from truck trailers by lifting, rolling, or dumping over the side or end, depending upon the type of trailer. Trees and long logs are usually lifted from trailers by a grapple on mobile wheel loaders or overhead cranes (which can unload the entire truck in one pass). Shorter logs are often unloaded using slings. In some cases, short wood for pulp is swept directly off the trailer and fed into a debarking machine to eliminate rehandling. Chip trailers are often tilted and end-dumped on large hydraulic ramps.
| Law Encyclopedia: Logging |
The cutting of, or commercial dealing in, tree trunks that have been cut down and stripped of all branches.
The statutes in certainjurisdictions provide for the marking of logs for the purpose of identification. Once a log is marked, its mark must be recorded, as must any change in ownership of the marked logs.
Trees which are standing upon land can become objects of personal property prior to their severance from the soil and, therefore, a change in the ownership of the land would have no effect upon ownership of the trees. Standing timber can be conveyed separately from the property upon which it was grown. If this occurs, two separate and distinct property interests are created: one in the land and one in the timber.
A purchaser of standing timber may enter onto the land for the purpose of cutting and removing the timber. Contracts for the sale of standing timber may limit the time during which the right of entry can continue.
The public may generally float logs on any stream which is capable of being so used in its natural state. When necessary, the right to use a stream includes the incidental right to use the banks, at least below the high-water mark.
| WordNet: logging |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
the work of cutting down trees for timber
| Wikipedia: Logging |
Logging is the process in which certain trees are cut down for forest management and timber.
In forestry the term logging is sometimes used in a narrow sense concerning the logistics of moving wood from the stump to somewhere outside the forest, usually a sawmill or a lumber yard. In common usage however the term may be used to indicate a range of forestry or silviculture activities. For example the practice of the removal of valuable trees from the forest has been called selective logging, sometimes confused with selection cut.[1]
Illegal logging refers to what in forestry might be called timber theft.[2] [3]
In common usage what is sometimes called clearcut logging is not is necessarily considered a type of logging but a harvest or silviculture method and is simply called clearcutting or block cutting. In the forest products industry logging companies may be referred as logging contractors.
Logging usually refers to above-ground forestry logging. Submerged forests exist on land that has been flooded by damming to create reservoirs. Such trees are logged using underwater logging or by the lowering of the reservoirs in question. Ootsa Lake and Williston Lake in British Columbia, Canada, are notable examples where timber recovery has been needed to remove inundated forests.
Contents |
The above operations can be carried out by different methods, of which the following three are considered industrial methods:
Trees are felled and then delimbed and topped at the stump. The log is then transported to the landing, where it is bucked and loaded on a truck. This leaves the slash (and the nutrients it contains) in the cut area where it must be further treated if wildland fires are of concern.
Trees are felled and transported to the roadside with top and limbs intact. The trees are then delimbed, topped, and bucked at the landing. This method requires that slash be treated at the landing. In areas with access to cogeneration facilities, the slash can be chipped and used for the production of clean electricity or heat. Full-tree harvesting also refers to utilization of the entire tree including branches and tops. [4] This technique removes both nutrients and soil cover from the site and so can be harmful to the long term health of the area if no further action is taken, however, depending on the species, many of the limbs are often broken off in handling so the end result may not be as different from tree-length logging as it might seem.
Cut-to-length logging is the process of felling, delimbing, bucking and sorting (pulpwood, sawlog, etc.) at the stump area, leaving limbs and tops in the forest. Harvesters fell the tree, delimb and buck it, and place the resulting logs in bunks to be brought to the landing by a skidder or forwarder. This method is usable for smaller timber on ground flat enough that forwarders can operate, but does not work well on steep slopes.
Felled logs are then generally transported to a sawmill to be cut into timber, a paper mill for paper pulp, or for other purposes like fence posts. Log transportation can be challenging and costly since trees are often far from navigable roads. Road building and maintenance may be restricted in National Forests or other wilderness areas since it can cause erosion in riparian zones. When felled logs sit adjacent to a road, heavy machinery may simply lift logs into trucks. Many methods exist to transport felled logs lying away from roads. Cable logging involves a yarder which pulls one or several logs along the ground to platform where a truck is waiting. When the terrain is too uneven to pull logs on the ground, a Skyline can lift logs off the ground vertically, similar to a ski lift. Heavy-lift helicopters, such as the CH-47 Chinook or Kaman K-MAX, may be used when cable logging is not allowed due to environmental concerns or when roads are lacking. Helicopters are the most expensive form of log transport. Less mainstream forms of log transport, or methods used previously include horses, oxen, or balloon logging.
Logging is a dangerous occupation. In the United States, it has consistently been one of the most hazardous industries, having a fatality rate over 21 times higher than the rate for all workers.[5] Loggers work with heavy, moving weights and the use of tools such as chainsaws and heavy equipment on uneven and sometimes unstable terrain. Loggers also deal with severe environmental conditions, such as inclement weather and severe heat or cold. An injured logger is often far from professional emergency treatment.
Traditionally, the cry of "Timber!" developed as a warning alerting fellow workers in an area that a tree is being felled, so they should be alert to avoid being struck. The term "widowmaker" for timber that is neither standing nor fallen to the ground demonstrates another emphasis on situational awareness as a safety principle.
The risks experienced in logging operations can be somewhat reduced, where conditions permit, by the use of mechanical tree harvesters, skidders and forwarders.
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Sci-Tech Encyclopedia. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Law Encyclopedia. West's Encyclopedia of American Law. Copyright © 1998 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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