Hay Dude
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2012
- Messages
- 18,716
- Location
- A Hay Field along the PA/DE border
- Tractor
- Challenger MT655E, Massey Ferguson 7495, Challenger MT535B, Krone 4x4 XC baler, (2) Kubota ZD331’s, 2020 Ram 5500 Cummins 4x4, IH 7500 4x4 dump truck, Kaufman 35’ tandem 19 ton trailer, Deere CX-15, Pottinger Hay mowers
Not sure how much faith I put in anything that’s “estimated”."—in 1630 the area of forest land that would become the United States was 423 million hectares or about 46 percent of the total land area. By 1907, the area of forest land had declined to an estimated 307 million hectares or 34 percent of the total land area. Forest area has been relatively stable since 1907. In 1997, 302 million hectares— or 33 percent of the total land area of the United States— was in forest land. Today’s forest land area amounts to about 70 percent of the area that was forested in 1630. Since 1630, about 120 million hectares of forest land have been converted to other uses—mainly agricultural. More than 75 percent of the net conversion to other uses occurred in the 19th century."
I read a study from somewhere that the number of deer is higher now than the 1600.
Seen that word used for nefarious reasons too many times.
Where I live we have gone from heavily wooded, to deforested for farming, and now back to heavily wooded. I have seen hundreds of arial pictures taken all the way back to the early 1900’s from bi planes of endless farms in my area, now overgrown with mostly junk trees and brush.
We have a very famous local artist who painted farmland thats now engulfed in boxwood, junk tree-of-heaven and endless swaths of Japanese hops and ornamental stilt grass.
So in MY area, the deforestation trend has reversed. We probably have almost as much trees as we had here hundreds of years ago.