UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources Library
Showing 18 items from UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources Library
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Looking out over Humboldt Bay toward Eureka from top of log haul-up. 4 master loading lumber. Hammond Lumber Company, Samoa, California. May 28, 1920. E. FUC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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High lead and loading spars. Little River. Camp 23. Hammond Lumber Company, Samoa, California. May 31, 1920. E.FUC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Redwood Region. Use of chain saw for ripping redwood at Coast Redwood Company near Samoa, California. Halves in the pond. Note flat surfaces. E.F. 9-30-50UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Headsaw and carriage of double cutting band. Live rolls front and back of saw. Hammond Lumber Company Mill, Samoa, California. May, 1915UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Hammond Lumber Company, Humbolt County. View showing grading tables at tail of mill. Redwood and Douglas fir lumber. Mill situated at Samoa, California, across the bay from Eureka. It is a triple band mill with sash and door factory in connection. Manufactures from 70-80 million ft. of lumber per year. Employs 400 men. May 18, 1915UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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A 59" x 20' redwood log in process of ripping with an Atkins electric chain saw head and Titan chain. Coast Redwood Company, near Samoa, California. 9-30-50. E.FUC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Stand of Sitka spruce in depression among sand dunes. Beach pine (Pinus contorta) shown in northwest corner. Spruce on ocean side are dead from encroachment of dunes. Bay side of stand is practically pure beach pine fringed with willow. Samoa, Humboldt County. 5/27/15UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Sand dunes outside of Eureka harbor on the long spit west of Samoa. Looking north at the pothole group of trees shown in no. 137. Shows in the foreground the steep side of dune to the ocean with clump of Pinus contorta on top. These are 8 to 12 inches high and have many cones on them. Samoa, Humboldt County. 5/27/15UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Redwood Region. Ripped halves of redwood logs in pond of Coast Redwood Company near Samoa, California. Halves up to and over 70" across. E.F. 9-30-50UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Gantry crane for piling lumber. Hammond Lumber Company, Samoa, California. May 28, 1920. E. FUC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Redwood Region. Chain-saw ripped redwood logs. Coast Redwood Company near Samoa, California. Some large logs are quartered. Surfaces are straight and flat. E.F. 9-30-50. (80" x 16')UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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Redwood Region. One of Coast Redwood Company's 4 ripping crews. Near Samoa, above the log pond. John F. Felsher, ripping foreman. Up to this date he has ripped 23,000,000 board feet of logs. Costs about $3.00/M [thousand]. 9-30-50. E.FUC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources LibraryImage
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UC Berkeley, Bioscience & Natural Resources Library
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