On Naval Timber and Arboriculture. Patrick Matthew

On Naval Timber and Arboriculture - Patrick Matthew


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       Patrick Matthew

      On Naval Timber and Arboriculture

      With Critical Notes on Authors who have Recently Treated the Subject of Planting

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066232603

       INTRODUCTION.

       NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION.

       PART I. STRUCTURE OF VESSELS.

       SECTION I. PLANK.

       SECTION II. TIMBERS.

       NOTES TO PART I.

       PART II. BRITISH FOREST TREES USED AS NAVAL TIMBER.

       O AK — Quercus .

       S PANISH C HESTNUT — Castanea vulgaris , (Fagus Castanea, L.)

       B EECH -T REE — Fagus sylvatica .

       E LM — Ulmus. — B ROAD -L EAVED, OR S COTCH, or W YCH E LM — Ulmus montana.

       N ARROW-LEAVED OR E NGLISH E LM — Ulmus campestris .

       R EDWOOD W ILLOW , or S TAG’S H EAD O ZIER ,— Salix fragilis 13 .

       RED-WOOD PINE — Pinus .

       W HITE L ARCH — Larix communis , (L. pyramidalis) .

       NOTES TO PART II.

       PART III. MISCELLANEOUS MATTER CONNECTED WITH NAVAL TIMBER.

       NURSERIES.

       PLANTING.

       FURTHER OBSERVATIONS ON PRUNING.

       OBSERVATIONS ON TIMBER.

       CONCERNING OUR MARINE, &c.

       NOTES TO PART III.

       PART IV. NOTICES OF AUTHORS RELATIVE TO TIMBER.

       I. T HE F ORESTER’S G UIDE , by Mr Monteath .

       II.— N ICOL’S P LANTER’S C ALENDAR.

       III. B ILLINGTON ON P LANTING.

       IV.— F ORSYTH ON F RUIT AND F OREST T REES.

       V.— M R W ITHERS.

       VI.— S TEWARDS P LANTER’S G UIDE, AND S IR W ALTER S COTT’S C RITIQUE.

       VII. C RUICKSHANK’S P RACTICAL P LANTER.

       NOTES TO PART IV.

       APPENDIX.

       N OTE A.

       N OTE B.

       N OTE C.

       N OTE D, p. 4 .

       N OTE E.

       N OTE F.

       NOTES TO THE APPENDIX.

       ERRATA.

       Table of Contents

      NAVIGATION is of the first importance to the improvement and perfecting of the species, in spreading, by emigration, the superior varieties of man, and diffusing the arts and sciences over the world; in promoting industry, by facilitating the transfer of commodity through numberless channels from where it is not, to where it is required; and in healing the products of those most fertile but unwholesome portions of the earth, to others more congenial to the existence of the varieties of man susceptible of high improvement: Water being the general medium of action—fluidity or conveyance by water, almost as necessary to civilized life as it is to organic life, in bearing the molecules forward in their vital courses, and in floating the pabulum (the raw material) from the soil through the living canals to the manufactories of assimilized matter, and thence to the points of adaptation. {2}


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