Forest Resources
Baker, B.H. and T.H. Laurent. 1974. Forest Insect and Disease Conditions in Alaska, 1973. U.S. Forest Service.
Baker, B.H. and D.J. Curtis. 1973. Forest Insect and Disease Conditions in Alaska—1972. U.S. Forest Service. 9 p.
Baker, B.H., B.B. Hostetler, and T.H. Laurent. 1975. Forest Insect and Disease Conditions in Alaska. 1974. U.S. Forest Service. 13 p.
Barnes, B.V. 1966. The clonal growth habit of American aspens. Ecology. 47:439-447.
Beckwith, R.C. 1972. Key to Adult Bark Beetles Commonly Associated with White Spruce Stands in Interior Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. Research Note PNW-189. 6 p.
Bjorkbom, J.C. 1967. Seedbed-Preparation Methods for Paper Birch. U.S. Forest Service. Research Paper NE-79. 15 p.
Boyce, J.S. 1961. Forest Pathology. McGraw-Hill. 572 p.
Clapp, V.W. 1972. Alaska's Forest Products Industry—A Directory of Loggers, Lumber Dealers, Sawmills and Other Forest Industries in the State of Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. 34 p.
__________. 1971. Alaska's Spruce. Alaska Woods Series no. 1. U.S. Forest Service. 41 p.
Clautice, S. 1974. "Spruce and birch germination on different seedbeds and aspects after fire in interior Alaska." University of Alaska, Fairbanks. M.S. thesis.
Crosby, D. and D.J. Curtis. 1970. Forest Insect Conditions in Alaska During 1969. U.S. Forest Service. 15 p.
Dowing, G.L. 1957. The Recent History of Destructive Forest Insect Activity in Alaska. Unpublished. Alaska Forest Research Center, U.S. Forest Service. 8 p.
Duerr, W.A. 1960. Fundamentals of Forestry Economics. McGraw-Hill. 579 p.
Farr, W.A. 1967. Board-Foot Tree Volume Tables and Equations for White Spruce in Interior Alaska. Institute of Northern Forestry, U.S. Forest Service. PNW-59. 4 p.
__________. 1967. Growth and Yield of Well-Stocked White Spruce Stands in Alaska. Institute of Northern Forestry, U.S. Forest Service. PNW-53. 30 p.
Federal Field Committee for Development Planning in Alaska. 1968. Alaska Natives and the Land. 565 p.
Fernow, B.E. 1902. The forests of Alaska in Harriman Alaska Expedition. v. 2. pp. 235-256.
Fire in the Northern Environment Symposium, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, 1971. C.W. Slaughter, R.J. Barney, and G.M. Hansen, eds. Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 275 p.
Ford-Robertson, F.C., ed. 1971. Terminology of Forest Science, Technology Practice and Products. Society of American Foresters. 349 p.
Foresters in Land-Use Planning. Portland, 1974, Proceedings. Society of American Foresters. 275 p.
Fowells, H.A. 1965. Silvics of Forest Trees of the United States. U.S. Forest Service. Agriculture Handbook 271. 762 p.
Gibbons, D.R. and E.O. Salo. 1973. An Annotated Bibliography of the Effects of Logging on Fish of the Western United States and Canada. U.S. Forest Service. General Technical Report PNW-10. 145 p.
Graham, K. 1963. Concepts of Forest Entomology. Reinhold. 388 p.
Gratkowski, H.J. 1975. Silvicultural Use of Herbicides in Pacific Northwest Forests. U.S. Forest Service. General Technical Report PNW-37. 44 p.
__________. 1956. Windthrow around staggered settings in old-growth Douglas-fir. Forest Science. 2(1):60-74.
Graves, H.S. 1916. The forests of Alaska. American Forestry. 22:24-37.
Gregory, R.A. 1966. The effect of leaf litter upon establishment of white spruce beneath paper birch. Forestry Chronicle. 42:251-255.
Gregory, R.A. and P.M. Haack. 1965. Growth and Yield of Well-Stocked Aspen and Birch Stands in Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. Research Note NOR-2. 28 p.
Gregory, R.A. and P.M. Haack. 1964. Equations and Tables for Estimating Cubic-Food Volume of Interior Alaska Tree Species. U.S. Forest Service. Research Note NOR-6. 21 p.
Guthrie, J.D. 1922, Alaska's interior forests. Journal of Forestry. 20:363-373.
Haack, P.M. 1963. Aerial Photo Volume Tables for Interior Alaska Tree Species. U.S. Forest Service. Research Note NOR-3. 8 p.
__________. 1963. Volume Tables for Trees of Interior Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. Research Note NOR-5. 11 p.
Hanson, H.C. 1953. Vegetation types in northwestern Alaska and comparisons with communities in other arctic regions. Ecology. 34:111-140.
Hard, J.S. 1967. Identification of Destructive Alaska Forest Insects. Institute of Northern Forestry, U.S. Forest Service. 19 p.
Haring, R.C. and M.R.C. Massie. 1966. A Survey of the Alaskan Forest Products Industry. Institute of Social, Economic and Government Research, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Research Monograph 8. 147 p.
Hegg, K.M. 1967. A Photo Identification Guide for the Land and Forest Types of Interior Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. Research Paper NOR-3. 55 p.
Hegg, K.M. and R.M. Dippold. 1973. Areas of Non-Forest and Non-Commercial Forest Lands by Cover Type and by Topographic Site for Interior Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. Resource Bulletin PNW-47. 15 p.
Heinselman, M.L. 1957. Silvical Characteristics of Black Spruce (Picea mariana). Lake States Forest Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service. Paper 45. 30 p.
Horsley, S.B. and H.G. Abbot. 1970. Direct seeding of paper birch in strip clearcutting. Journal of Forestry. 68:635-638.
Horton, K.W. and E.J. Hopkins. 1965. Influence of Fire on Aspen Suckering. Canada. Dept. of Forestry. Publication 1095. 19 p.
Hostetler, B.B., P.A. Rush, and T.H. Laurent. 1976. Forest Insect and Disease Conditions in Alaska, 1975. U.S. Forest Service. 11 p.
Hutchison, O.K. 1967. Alaska's Forest Resource. Institute of Northern Forestry, U.S. Forest Service. Resource Bulletin PNW-19. 74 p.
Hutnik, R.J. 1954. Effect of seedbed condition on paper birch reproduction. Journal of Forestry. 52:493-495.
Hutnik, R.J. and F.E. Cunningham. 1961. Silvical Characteristics of Paper Birch. Northeast Forest Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service. Paper 141. 24 p.
Hyvarinen, M.J. 1968. Paper Birch: Its Characteristics, Properties, and Uses—A Review of Recent Literature. U.S. Forest Service. Research Paper NC-22. 12 p.
International Peat Congress, 4th, Otaniemi, Finland. 1972. Proceedings. The Use of Peatland for Agriculture, Horticulture, and Forestry. v. 3. Bog Cultivation and Afforestation. 569 p.
Joint Federal-State Land Use Planning Commission for Alaska. 1974. Resources of Alaska: A Regional Summary. 619 p.
__________. 1973. Major Ecosystems of Alaska. (scale 1:2,500,000)
Keen, F.D. 1958. Cone and Seed Insects of Western Forest Trees. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Technical Bulletin 1169. 168 p.
Kellog, R.S. 1910. The Forests of Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. Bulletin 81.
Kimmey, J.W. and J.A. Stevenson. 1957. A forest disease survey of Alaska. U.S. Agricultural Research Service. Agricultural Research Service Suppl. 247:87-98.
Lamb, F.M. 1967. Aspen Wood Characteristics, Properties, and Uses, A Review of Recent Literature. U.S. Forest Service. Research Paper NC-13. 15 p.
Lantz, R.L. 1971. Guidelines for Stream Protection in Logging Operations. Oregon State Game Commission. 29 p.
LeBarron, R.K. 1939. The role of forest fires in the reproduction of black spruce. Minnesota Academy of Science. Proceedings. 7:10-14.
Lees, J.C. 1970. Natural Regeneration of White Spruce Under Spruce-Aspen Shelterwood. Canada. Dept. of Fisheries and Forestry. Publication 1274. 14 p.
Litton, R.B. 1968. Forest Landscape Description and Inventories—A Basis For Land Planning and Design. U.S. Service. Research Paper PSW-49. 64 p.
Log Storage and Rafting in Public Waters Task Force, 1971. Log Storage and Rafting in Public Waters. Pacific Northwest Pollution Control Council. 56 p.
Lotspeich, F.B. and A.E. Heimers. 1974. Environmental Guidelines for Development Roads in the Subarctic. U.S.Environmental Protection Agency. Ecological Research Series. 63 p.
Lutz, H.J. 1963. Early Forest Conditions in the Alaska Interior—An Historical Account with Original Sources. Northern Forest Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service, Juneau. 74 p.
__________. 1957. Forest-site relations in the Alaskan interior in Proceedings of the 8th Alaskan Science Conference, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, 1957. pp. 120-122.
__________. 1956. Ecological Effects of Forest Fires in the Interior of Alaska. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Technical Bulletin 1133. 121 p.
__________. 1951. Damage to trees by black bears in Alaska. Journal of Forestry. 49:522-523.
Lutz, H.J. and A.P. Caporaso. 1958. Indicators of Forest Land Classes in Air-Photo Interpretation of the Alaska Interior. Alaska Forest Research Center, U.S. Forest Service. 31 p.
Lutz, H.J. and A.P. Caporaso. 1958. Vegetation and Topographic Situation as Indicators of Forest Land Classes in Air-Photo Interpretation of the Alaska Interior. Alaska Forest Research Center, U.S. Forest Service. Station Paper 10. 31 p.
Lysons, H.H. and R. Twito. 1973. Skyline logging: an economical means of reducing environmental impact of logging. Journal of Forestry. 71(9):580-583.
McHarg, I.L. 1969. Design with Nature. Natural History Press. 197 p.
Markwardt, L.J. 1931. The Distribution and the Mechanical Properties of Alaska Woods. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Technical Bulletin 226. 79 p.
Marquis, D.A. 1969. Silvical requirements for natural birch regeneration in Proceedings of the Birch Symposium, University of New Hampshire, Durham. pp. 40-49.
Neinstaedt, H. 1957. Silvical Characteristics of White Spruce. Lake States Forest Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service. Paper 55. 23 p.
Norris, L.A. and D.G. Moore. 1972. The entry and fate of forest chemicals in streams in Proceedings of Forest Land Uses and Stream Environment, Oregon State University, Corvallis, 1970. pp. 138-158.
Phillips, R.W. 1971. Effects of sediment on the gravel environment and fish production in Proceedings of a Symposium on Forest Land Uses and Stream Environment, Oregon State University, Corvallis, 1970, pp. 64-74.
Roe, E.I. 1958. Silvical Characteristics of Balsam Poplar. Lake States Forest Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service. Paper 65. 17 p.
Schaumburg, F.D. 1973. The Influence of Log Handling on Water Quality. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 105 p.
Schmid, J.M. and R.C. Beckwith. 1975. The Spruce Beetle. U.S. Forest Service. Forest Pest Leaflet 127. 7 p.
Schmiege, D.C. 1966. A note on the occurrence of the larch sawfly in Alaska. Canadian Entomologist. 98(6):671-672.
Shea, K.R. 1971. Disease and insect activity in relation to intensive culture of forests in Proceedings of the 15th International Union of Forestry Research Organizations.
Sheridan, W.L. 1968. Land use and sediment in Proceedings of a Forum on Logging and Salmon. AIFRB. pp. 62-79.
Smith, D.M. 1962. The Practice of Silviculture. John Wiley and Sons. 578 p.
Stein, W.I. 1973. What do we mean by stocking? in Committees Proceedings, Western Forestry and Conservation Association. pp. 105-109.
Stoeckeler, E.G. 1952. Trees of Interior Alaska, Their Significance as Soil and Permafrost Indicators. St. Paul District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 25 p.
Stoeckler, J.H. 1948. The growth of quaking aspen as affected by soil properties and fire. Journal of Forestry. 46:727-737.
Strothman, R.O. and Z.A. Zasada. 1957. Silvical Characteristics of Quaking Aspen (Populus tremuloides). Lake States Forest Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service. Paper 49. 26 p.
Sutton, R,F. 1969. Silvics of White Spruce (Picea glauca (Moench Voss.) ). Canada. Dept. of Fisheries and Forestry. Publication 1250. 57 p.
Swanston, D.N. 1971. Principal soil movement processes influenced by roadbuilding, logging and fire in Proceedings of a Symposium on Forest Land Uses and Stream Environment, Oregon State University, Corvallis, 1970. pp. 29-40.
Tarrant, R.F. and J.M. Trappe. 1971. The role of Alnus in improving the forest environment. Plant and Soil, Special Volume. 1971: 335-348.
Tarrant, R.F., H.J. Gratkowski, and W.E. Waters. 1973. The Future Role of Chemicals in Forestry. U.S. Forest Service. General Technical Report PNW-6. 10 p.
Tarrant, R.F. et al. 1969. Nitrogen Enrichment of Two Forest Ecosystems By Red Alder. U.S. Forest Service. Research Paper PNW-76. 8 p.
Thomas, J.W. et al. 1975. Silvicultural options and habitat values in coniferous forests in Proceedings of the Symposium on Management of Forest and Range Habitats for Non-Game Birds, Tucson. pp. 272-287.
Tripp, H.H. and A.F. Hedlin. 1956. An ecological study and damage appraisal of white spruce cone insects. Forestry Chronicle. 32(4):400-410.
U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. 1949. Trees—The Yearbook of Agriculture. A. Stefferud, ed. 944 p.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 1975. Logging Roads and Protection of Water Quality. Region X. EPA/910/9-75/007.
__________. 1973. Managing the Environment. Washington Environmental Research Center. 387 p.
U.S. Federal Water Pollution Control Administration. 1970. Industrial Waste Guide on Logging Practices. Northwest Region.
U.S. Forest Service. 1963. Characteristics of Alaska Woods. Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wisconsin. Research Paper FPL 1. 64 p.
U.S. Soil Conservation Service, Alaska. University. Institute of Agricultural Sciences, and Alaska Association of Soil Conservation Districts. 1972. A Vegetative Guide for Alaska. 50 p.
Urban and Rural Lands Committee. 1973. Ecology and the Economy. Pacific Northwest River Basins Commission. 118 p.
Van Cleve, K. 1975. Recovery of Disturbed Tundra and Taiga Surfaces. Paper for presentation at International Symposium of Recovery of Damaged Ecosystems, Virginia Polytechnical Institute.
__________. 1972. Revegetation of disturbed tundra and taiga surfaces by introduced and native plant species in Proceedings of the Symposium on the Impact of Oil Resource Development on Northern Plant Communities. B.H. McCown and D.R. Simpson, coordinators. Institute of Arctic Biology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Occasional Papers on Northern Life 1. pp. 7-11.
__________. 1971. Effects of some intensive forest management practices on white spruce ecosystems in interior Alaska in Fire in the Northern Environment Symposium. C.W. Slaughter, R.J. Barney, and G.M. Hansen, eds. Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. pp. 199-207.
Van Cleve, K. and J. Manthei. 1972. Summary Report of the Tundra-Taiga Surface Stabilization Study. Institute of Arctic Biology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Report for Alyeska Pipeline Service Co., Inc. 94 p.
Viereck, L.A. and E.L. Little. 1975. Atlas of United States Trees. Volume 2. Alaska Trees and Common Shrubs. U.S. Forest Service. Miscellaneous Publication 1293.
Viereck, L.A. and E.L. Little. 1972. Alaska Trees and Shrubs. U.S. Forest Service. Agriculture Handbook 410. 265 p.
Viereck, L.A. and J.M. Foote. 1970. The status of Populus balsamifera and P. trichocarpa in Alaska. Canadian Field-Naturalist. 84(2):169-173.
Vincent, A.B. 1965. Black Spruce—A Review of Its Silvics, Ecology, and Silviculture. Canada. Dept. of Forestry. Publication 1100. 79 p.
Wadleigh, C.H. 1968. Wastes in Relation to Agriculture and Forestry. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Miscellaneous Publication 1065. 112 p.
Zasada, J.C. 1973. Interior Alaska hardwoods in Silvicultural Systems for the Major Forest Types of the United States. U.S. Forest Service. Agriculture Handbook 445. pp. 21-22.
__________. 1973. Interior Alaska white spruce in Silvicultural Systems for the Major Forest Types of the United States. U.S. Forest Service. Agriculture Handbook 445. pp. 20-21.
__________. 1972. Guidelines for Obtaining Natural Regeneration of White Spruce in Alaska. Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service. 16 p.
__________. 1971. Natural regeneration of interior Alaska forests—seed, seedbed, and vegetative reproduction considerations in Fire in the Northern Environment Symposium, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. C.W. Slaughter, R.J. Barney, and G.M. Hansen, eds. Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station.
Zasada, J.C. and R.A. Gregory. 1969. Regeneration of White Spruce With Reference to Interior Alaska. U.S. Forest Service. Research Note PNW-129.
Zasada, J.C. and R.A. Gregory. 1969. Regeneration of White Spruce With Reference to Interior Alaska: A Literature Review. Institute of Northern Forestry, U.S. Forest Service. Research Paper PNW-79. 37 p.
Zufelt, W.J. 1973. Forest Resources of the Norton Bay Native Reserve, Alaska, 1973. U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs. 35 p.