Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A section of land covered with forest or set aside for the cultivation of forests.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Land covered by trees,
forests ,woodlands .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Most other Federal land is usually non-descript mountain forestland, rolling sagebrush hills and bluffs, or rolling grasslands, which can be utilized for various economic and recreational pursuits, such as mining, logging, agriculture, hunting and hiking/camping.
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Most other Federal land is usually non-descript mountain forestland, rolling sagebrush hills and bluffs, or rolling grasslands, which can be utilized for various economic and recreational pursuits, such as mining, logging, agriculture, hunting and hiking/camping.
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If the use of government forestland is insufficiently controlled, that’s a government failure, not a market failure.
The Volokh Conspiracy » Democracy and the Appeal of Socialism 2010
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Logging in national forestland where road building is restricted increases costs, cutting into the already slim profits from timber.
Carol Pierson Holding: Why Logging US National Forestland to Sell Timber to China Is a Really Bad Idea Carol Pierson Holding 2011
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The department this year also received an environmental certification for 145,000 acres of forestland, meaning it's logged according to strict environmental standards.
The Seattle Times 2008
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But after logging declined, the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act was established to allow affected counties to opt in to a payment program that did not depend on US forestland timber sales.
Carol Pierson Holding: Why Logging US National Forestland to Sell Timber to China Is a Really Bad Idea Carol Pierson Holding 2011
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So even though timber prices themselves may be volatile, the price of forestland itself tends to hold its value: From 1992 to 2005 the FIM Timber index declined by more than 50%, but the Property Databank U.K. Forestry Index returned an annualized 3.7% over the same period.
Stonehage's Armist Sees Green in Timber Tara Loader Wilkinson 2011
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Gloria Vollmers in her article "Industrial slavery in the United States: the North Carolina turpentine industry 1849-61" states "The nature of the work, which covered thousands of acres of forestland, led to the use of a task system whereby each slave was assigned a large tract of forest that was worked with little supervision over several months."
John 2010
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Private equity turned in a 25% return, followed by a 14% return from investments in commodities, infrastructure, forestland and inflation-linked bonds.
Calpers Reports Best Returns in 14 Years Joan E. Solsman 2011
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And these low profits are from timber harvested on private forestland where costs are lower.
Carol Pierson Holding: Why Logging US National Forestland to Sell Timber to China Is a Really Bad Idea Carol Pierson Holding 2011
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