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Pine-Oak-Heath-Sandplain Forest at Camp Johnson -- Forests like this are common south of Vermont, but restricted to a few locations within the state (see gigapan.org/gigapans/34970/ for another location). The distinguishing feature is the presence of pitch pine (Pinus rigida) which is near the northern limit o...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 3
- Comments
- 5
- Snapshots
- 8
- Total Views
- 5952
- Explore Score
- 110
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Pine-Oak-Heath-Sandplain Forest, Salisbury, Vermont -- Due to the presence of pitch pine, this is one of the rarest forest communities in Vermont, known only from the deltaic sandplains of Colchester (gigapan.org/gigapans/30324/) and this stand in the Salisbury Town Forest. The parent material for the droughty,...
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Stats
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- 1
- Comments
- 3
- Snapshots
- 6
- Total Views
- 4038
- Explore Score
- 102
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Mesic Red Oak-Northern Hardwood Forest, Salisbury, Vermont -- This well-drained kame terrace in the Salisbury Town Forest supports a dry example of this forest type with three oak species. The forest community is distinguished by the absence of sugar maple, an important component of hardwood forests on less droughty s...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 4
- Comments
- 3
- Snapshots
- 5
- Total Views
- 4488
- Explore Score
- 100
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There are several dozen examples of this forest community in Vermont, most of them less than a few hectares in size. This is the most recently discovered example. The community is distinguished by the presence of pitch pine, which reaches its northern range limit in Vermont, and occurs in only three community types i...
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Stats
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- 3
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 10
- Total Views
- 3179
- Explore Score
- 100
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Dry Oak Forest in the Salisbury Town Forest. Thin, till-derived soil on this gentle south-facing slope supports a stunted forest of white, chestnut, and red oak. These species grow more than twice as tall elsewhere on deeper or wetter soils. Shrubs, herbs, and grasses take advantage of the ample sunlight passing thro...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 0
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 5
- Total Views
- 3895
- Explore Score
- 93
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Hemlock Forest in the Salisbury Town Forest -- Eastern hemlocks are responsible for more than 75% of both tree density and canopy cover in this stand, and hardwoods scattered among the hemlocks include three species of oak. The dark forest floor supports little more than mosses. Many of the trees here are about 200 y...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 4
- Total Views
- 3027
- Explore Score
- 92
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Northern Hardwood Forest – Sugar maple and American beech are common in this stand and provide the yellow glow. Beech trees have reproduced by root sprouts far from the main trunks and form a dense sapling thicket. These saplings and some young sugar maples have held onto their yellowed leaves and brighten this sce...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 3
- Total Views
- 3823
- Explore Score
- 91
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Limestone Bluff Cedar-Pine Forest at Lone Rock Point, Vermont – This forest type, dominated by northern white cedar (Thuja occidentalis), is common in Vermont only where calcareous cliffs overlook Lake Champlain. At Lone Rock Point, thin soil among the outcrops of Dunham dolostone supports a stunted cedar forest wi...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 3
- Total Views
- 3371
- Explore Score
- 91
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Mesic Red Oak-Northern Hardwood Forest on a kame terrace in Salisbury, Vermont -- Large diameter red and white oaks in this small stand are the most valuable timber in the 130 acre Salisbury Town Forest. Many trees could provide veneer-quality logs, making some worth a few hundred dollars apiece. Although the canopy ...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 4
- Total Views
- 3057
- Explore Score
- 83
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Limestone Bluff Cedar-Pine Forest at Lone Rock Point, Vermont – Dunham dolostone (Cambrian, light color) has been thrust to the west as much as 80 km (50 miles) and rests here on top of much younger Iberville shale (Ordovician, black). The contrasting appearance of the two rock types, and the ca. 50 million year diff...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 5
- Total Views
- 3270
- Explore Score
- 67
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