The Alaska Reference Database originated as the standalone Alaska Fire Effects Reference Database, a ProCite reference database maintained by former BLM-Alaska Fire Service Fire Ecologist Randi Jandt. It was expanded under a Joint Fire Science Program grant for the FIREHouse project (The Northwest and Alaska Fire Research Clearinghouse). It is now maintained by the Alaska Fire Science Consortium and FRAMES, and is hosted through the FRAMES Resource Catalog. The database provides a listing of fire research publications relevant to Alaska and a venue for sharing unpublished agency reports and works in progress that are not normally found in the published literature.
Type
Topic
Year
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12
Jordan
[no description entered]
Year: 1885
Type: Document
Source: TTRS
Auten
[no description entered]
Year: 1940
Type: Document
Source: TTRS
Frothingham
[no description entered]
Year: 1914
Type: Document
Source: TTRS
Richards
[no description entered]
Year: 1940
Type: Document
Source: TTRS
Byram
The author presents excellent evidence that the effects of sun and wind are not necessarily additive in their effect on reducing the moisture content of fuels, but that wind may actually retard the rate at which forest fuel will lose moisture because of its effect in lowering…
Year: 1940
Type: Document
Source: TTRS
Graves
[no description entered]
Year: 1914
Type: Document
Source: TTRS
Beals
[Excerpted from paper] Climate is defined as the sum of weather conditions affecting animal and plant life, and as trees come under the head of plant life, they are affected by climate from whatever point of view the cause and effect of climate in connection with forests may be…
Year: 1914
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES
Headley
The July and October 1939 issues of Fire Control Notes carried 'Lessons Learned' from the larger fires of 1938. In this issue, the larger fires of 1939 in the Eastern, Southern, and North Central national-forest regions are reviewed. Eastern fire-control men will thus have a…
Year: 1940
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES, TTRS
Huntington
[from the text] Climate as an element of physical environment is so well recognized that there is no need to demonstrate its importance. By common consent it is held to be a primary factor not only in the life of plants, animals, and man as they exist today, but in their entire…
Year: 1914
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES
Schorger
[no description entered]
Year: 1914
Type: Document
Source: TTRS