Skip to main content
News Banner

941 Search Results

  • Publications

    [Archive] Fifth Annual Report of the Forestry Commissioners 1923-1924

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    Published by HMSO, for the year ending 30 September 1924.
  • Publications

    [Archive] Journal of the Forestry Commission (No.4)

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    The Forestry Commission Journal was introduced as a way to communicate information on a wide range of topics which could not be communicated through ‘ordinary official channels’, and was intended to be a means of exchanging the opinions and experiences of all members of the staff.This fourth Journal includes information on: Notes on forestry in […]
  • Publications

    [Archive] The Phomopsis disease of conifers

    Lead Author: Malcolm Wilson
    The fungus Phomopsis pseudotsugae, which has from time to time been known under different names, has a wide distribution in Britain and also occurs on the continent of Europe. It may attack both the green and the blue Douglas firs, the European and Japanese larches and Abies grandis among the silver firs. It is possible […]
  • Publications

    [Archive] Research Annual Reports 1923-1924

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    The annual reports of Forest Research for the year 1923-1924 which includes:– Nursery and plantation experiments (Scotland, England and Wales).– Permanent sample plots.(i) Growth of Scots and Corsican pine seedlings.(ii) Germination of seed.– Comparative growth of Norway and Sitka spruce seedlings in ordinary and peaty soils.– Peat Investigations(chemical and physical effect on growth of trees)– […]
  • Publications

    [Archive] Fourth Annual Report of the Forestry Commissioners 1922-1923

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    Published by HMSO, for the year ending 30 September 1923.
  • Publications

    [Archive] Journal of the Forestry Commission (No.3)

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    The Forestry Commission Journal was introduced as a way to communicate information on a wide range of topics which could not be communicated through ‘ordinary official channels’, and was intended to be a means of exchanging the opinions and experiences of all members of the staff.This third Journal includes information on: Objects and scope of […]
  • Publications

    [Archive] Poplars 1923

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    In this bulletin an attempt is made to indicate which kinds of poplar it is advisable to cultivate and how they should be planted and treated with a view to the economic production of timber.
  • Publications

    [Archive] Third Annual Report of the Forestry Commissioners 1921 -1922

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    Published HMSO, for the year ending 30 September 1922.
  • Publications

    [Archive] Journal of the Forestry Commission (No.2)

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    The Forestry Commission Journal was introduced as a way to communicate information on a wide range of topics which could not be communicated through ‘ordinary official channels’, and was intended to be a means of exchanging the opinions and experiences of all members of the staff.This second Journal includes information on: Research and experiment: meeting […]
  • Publications

    [Archive] Second Annual Report of the Forestry Commissioners 1920-1921

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    Published by HMSO, for the year ending 30 September 1921.
  • Publications

    [Archive] The Douglas fir chermes (chermes cooleyi)

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    This bulletin embodies the results of an investigation into the life history of Chermes (Gillettea) cooleyi Gillette, an American species of the family Chermesidae, which has made its appearance upon the Douglas fir in this country. The insect Chermes cooleyi lives partly on the Douglas fir and partly on the Sitka spruce. It is not […]
  • Publications

    [Archive] Journal of the Forestry Commission (No.1)

    Lead Author: Forestry Commission
    The Forestry Commission Journal was introduced as a way to communicate information on a wide range of topics which could not be communicated through 'ordinary official channels' and was intended to be a means of exchanging the opinions and experiences of all members of the staff. The introduction to this first Journal states that: 'All noteworthy […]