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Science (General), Research, and the Scientific Method (Subscribe) Terms, definitions, phrases, and concepts related to science, research, and the scientific method.

Land Terms

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Heterogeneous (natural sciences) popular

Different or dissimilar in structure, function, composition, quality, or origin.

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Hydrologic cycle

Describes the solar energy-driven process by which water moves and is distributed on the earth's surface; includes as major components precipitation, evaporation, transpiration, infiltration, surface runoff, and groundwater flows.

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Index popular

A scale comapring relative values with each other or a predetermined reference.

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Infiltration

The process by which precipitation enters sub-surface layers of the soil; some is held as soil moisture recharge, some resurfaces as streamflow, and the remainder becomes part of groundwater flows (aquifers).

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Land use

The activities, operations, or purposes that are employed in a particualr geographic area; the specific manner in which a parcel or tract of land is utilized. Land use is usually regulated by municipal governments through zoning ordinances, although some land uses are regulated by state or federal governments.

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Lumber

1. (n.) Timber or logs that have been sawed, split, or planed into wood used to frame or build structures. 2. (n.) Discarded or unused articles or other chattels such as furniture that have been stored. 3. (v.) To harvest or remove timber and convert it into building materials.

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Merchantable species

Species of trees that are commercially valuable as timber. Examples include Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), redwood (Sequoia sempervirens), and eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides).

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Observation

The first step in the scientific method, observation is the act of examining, inspecting, or scrutinizing natural or other phenomena in such a manner that leads to the use of abductive reasoning to explain them.

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Observed result

The actual outcome of a designed experiment using the scientific method. This outcome is compared to the expected outcome as described in the research hypothesis, and a conclusion is made that the experimental data either supports or contradicts the hypothesis.

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Pole

1. A unit of length or area equal to one linear rod or one square rod, commonly used in land surveys. The terms, rod, pole, and perch are equivalent and may be used interchangeably, although "rod" is the most common. One (1) pole is equal to 25 links, 16.5 feet, or 1/4 (0.25) chain. For conversions and examples, see Rod, pole, or perch equivalents and conversions and the various Converting rods, poles, or perches to... entries.
2. A roundwood product used primarily for structural support. Tree species used for poles are selected for resistance to weather, wear, and mechanical stress and include lodgepole pine, Douglas-fir, western hemlock, and a variety of southern pines.
3. Term applied to trees that have too small a diameter to be considered sawlogs, but are useful as structural supports, flagpoles, etc.
4. The end of an axis, as in poles of the earth or of cellular mitotic spindles in plants and animals.
5. Either of two opposing parts, forces, or situations, as in magnets, batteries, or opinions.

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Precipitation

Water that falls from the atmosphere to the earth's surface due to climatic factors, primarily in the forms of rain and snow.

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Presettlement

Refers to the era prior to European settlement of North America, especially to the period before industrialization made it possible for these settlers to induce unprecedented ecosystem changes.

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Reef

A ridge of rock, coral, or sand at or near the surface of a body of water.

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Reference condition

A point in history that is considered to be representative of the natural conditions of an ecosystem. This point, which may be in the past or present, is chosen such that it is within the historic or natural range of variability for a particular area.

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Regime

A pattern of regular or semi-regular occurrences or processes that characterizes and governs a natural system, as in precipitation regime, fire regime, disturbance regime, etc.

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Result

The outcome of an experiment conducted using the scientific method. This observed result is compared to the expected result according to the research hypothesis, and a conclusion is made about whether the results support or contradict the hypothesis.

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Rule of thumb - change in temperature with change in elevation or latitude

Generally, temperature decreases as elevation increases. For every 1,000 foot increase in elevation, temperature decreases three (3) degrees Fahrenheit, and vice versa. As latitude becomes more northward in the Northern Hemisphere and more southerly in the Southern Hemisphere, temperature decreases. The general rule is that temperature changes three (3) degrees Fahrenheit for every 300 mile change in latitude at an elevation of sea level. These temperature changes influence greatly the diversity and abundance of plant and animal species from place to place. However, other factors such as soil, topography, aspect, and precipitation are also extremely important in determining the types of plant and animal life that occur in any given area.

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Scientific method popular

1. The series of rational steps that leads to the proof (or disproof) of a scientific or research hypothesis. The steps are observation, which leads to the formulation of a hypothesis through abductive reasoning, followed by tests or experiments to determine the validity of the hypothesis (deductive reasoning). The observed result of the experiment is compared to the expected result, and a conclusion is made supporting or contradicting the hypothesis. 2. The scientific method is the process by which scientific facts are discovered, proven, or learned.

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Site productivity

The characteristics of a site that influence growth of vegetation, including soil chemical and physical properties, climate, aspect, elevation, topography, and disturbance regime.

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Stand popular

A contiguous group of trees that are similar enough in species composition, age class distribution, and site productivity or characteristics that it can be considered a single unit, regardless of size.

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Streamflow

Surface runoff that is confined to a stream or river channel.

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Surface runoff

Water that flows over the earth's surface; precipitation that falls to the earth, is not infiltrated, evaporated, or transpired, and exceeds the capacity of the soil or the vegetation to absorb it.

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Temperature variation with variation in latitude or elevation

Generally, temperature decreases as elevation increases. For every 1,000 foot increase in elevation, temperature decreases three (3) degrees Fahrenheit, and vice versa. As latitude becomes more northward in the Northern Hemisphere and more southerly in the Southern Hemisphere, temperature decreases. The general rule is that temperature changes three (3) degrees Fahrenheit for every 300 mile change in latitude at an elevation of sea level. These temperature changes influence greatly the diversity and abundance of plant and animal species from place to place. However, other factors such as soil, topography, aspect, and precipitation are also extremely important in determining the types of plant and animal life that occur in any given area.

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Timber

1. Live trees of merchantable species and sufficient size that they can be profitably harvested and sold. Timber is then milled and made into lumber and other wood products. 2. Forest land covered by trees of suitable size, kind, and quality to be of commercial value.

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