College of Forestry
Oregon State University's College of Forestry is beginning its second century of educating professionals. It has earned a reputation as a world-class center of teaching and learning about forests and related resources. The OSU College of Forestry offers undergraduate and graduate degrees in three departments: Forest Engineering,Resources and Management, Forest Ecosystems and Society, and Wood Science and Engineering. It also offers several interdisciplinary programs in collaboration with other colleges at OSU. The College operates 14,000 acres of College Forests. Most are within minutes of campus.
For additional information, refer to the College of Forestry website at: http://www.cof.orst.edu/college.php.
Collections
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Theses, Dissertations and Student Research Papers (College of Forestry 1984 to present)
[184]
Collection contains scholarly output of student majors in the Oregon State University College of Forestry.
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Theses, Dissertations and Student Research Papers (School of Forestry, 1923 - 1984)
[169]
Collection contains scholarly output of student majors in the Oregon State University School of Forestry.
Sub-communities
Recent Submissions
- Potential for using through-boring to improve groundline treatment of Australian wood species: A preliminary study
- Weibull diameter distribution models for managed stands of Douglas-fir in Washington and Oregon
- Including wood stiffness in tree improvement of coastal Douglas-fir in the US Pacific Northwest: a literature review and synthesis
- Lead-user research in the wood window value chain
- Functional decreases in hydraulic and mechanical properties of field-grown transgenic poplar trees caused by modification of the lignin synthesis pathway through downregulation of the 4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase gene
- Non-destructive evaluation of veneer using optical scanning and ultrasonic stress wave analysis systems
- An HP-75/HP--86 computer data collection system for recording and displaying logging equipment time studies
- Factors influencing residual stand damage levels due to cable thinning of coniferous stands in western Oregon

