Chainsaw-wielding Robotic Submarine 322
merryprankster writes "New Scientist is running a story about Sawfish, a chainsaw-wielding
robotic submarine used as an underwater lumberjack. There are some 200
million trees thought to be standing on the floor of hydropower reservoirs worldwide.
Sawfish attaches airbags to, and cuts around 9 trees an hour - the trees then float
to the surface for collection. Cue the jokes about robotic high heels, suspenders
and a bra."
Great Wood from these Trees (Score:5, Informative)
Great idea. Hope it's not one of the ugly big corporations that Michael hates so much that is doing it. And for god's sake, let's hope nobody actually makes an EVIL profit off of it. Right, Michael?
Re:How good is the wood like that? (Score:2, Informative)
pictures (Score:5, Informative)
Found some pics here [woodworkweb.com].
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:1, Informative)
While I suppose you mean well, "slow-growing lumber" is caused by improper soils and site conditions (ie. north slope of hills)among other factors, including species, of course. Trees that grow fast are in proper soils and on sunny, (southern) slopes.
Old growth lumber is a decadent, unnatural forest, that is caused by man supressing forest fires for the last 100 years, which is nature's only way of renewing a forest, believe-it-or-not. Cones won't open, releasing seeds, unless under extreme heat.
Old growth lumber, at the bottom of a lake, is going to rot, and is subject to parasites - ask the Japanese this. They tried to store logs underwater and found them infested with bugs when they brought them up.
Sawfish Triton (Score:3, Informative)
Re:pictures (Score:2, Informative)
erm
CORRECT photo here... (Score:5, Informative)
(darn, I forgot to close a quote.
Sub Picture (Score:3, Informative)
Company Website + More Pictures (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How good is the wood like that? (Score:2, Informative)
Good enough for me.
And a company called Mountain Lumber [mountainlumber.com] retrieves wood from piers in DC [mountainlumber.com] and Savannah for resale to homebuilders (I really wanted some of the wood from that Savannah pier for my house - too damn expensive, though)
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How good is the wood like that? (Score:5, Informative)
With the rapid depletion of old wood, it should be reserved for high-end furniture, instruments, etc. This is a fantastic alternative for outside use!
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:5, Informative)
You obviously don't have the foggiest idea what you are talking about.
Old growth forrests around here are HUNDREDS of years old. Kind of hard to get that way due to 100 years of firefighting.
Also, this wood is in great shape if it is under enough water. You go deep enough, and it's pretty lifeless. I have a picture frame I made out of summerged old growth. It's some of the nicese stuff around.
Re:How good is the wood like that? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Okay, I'll Admit It... (Score:5, Informative)
Check this page:
http://www.holysmoke.org/wb/wb0198.htm
Near the end.
GJC
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:5, Informative)
Uh
Some trees do require fire for their cones to release their seeds, but there are many that don't. In fact, most trees in the Pacific Northwest don't (at least on the west side of the Cascades) - forest fires are extremely uncommon due to the wet climate.
Seattle was covered with old growth forest when the settlers arrived in the 1850s. That certainly was the natural state of the forests. There are only a few old growth trees left within the city.
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:5, Informative)
Right, because after all, the U.S. Agriculture Department says [go.com] America has 749 million acres of forestland. In 1920, we had 735 million acres of forest.
Only 7% of current U.S. forestland has been planted by man, so I suppose that only leaves 687 million acres of old growth forest. Yep, sure sounds like it's almost all gone.
Never bought lumber, have you? (Score:4, Informative)
They'll be able to make plenty of profit per tree, probably over $100 each, after expenses.
Actually... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Return on Investment (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:4, Informative)
Nope, sure can't [georgianbaywetwood.com]
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:3, Informative)
This is not just "my logic", forestry is a science. Are you saying fire is not Mother Nature's main mechanism for renewing a forest? Are you saying 100 years of playing God with forest fire has not screwed up any ecosystems anywhere? Please elaborate. The US, in the past - maybe even still, had "Let Burn" policies (ie. Yellowstone) recognizing that fire suppression does indeed create unnatural forests.
Some trees do require fire for their cones to release their seeds, but there are many that don't.
Many that don't?? Many?? Such as?
To be fair, he's right to a limited extent. A cone soaked in a puddle or pond for extended periods will eventually sprout. A cone crushed by some force will also release it's seed. You can probably come up with other methods even. But Mother Nature designed forests for fire to be the main source of mass renewal.
Uh ... most old growth forests by definition are over a hundred and fifty years old
Most conifers don't even mature till about 100 years old, on average, and for most deciduous, it's more like 120-140 years, but it all depends on the species and their site conditions. Poplar, Aspen, etc. are considered hardwoods and yet can be mature after only 70-80 years. After reaching maturity, just like any other organism, you included, they begin to decay and it's all downhill after that.
With your logic you can't explain the existence of all those 400 year old trees unless you have Native American firefighters.
Again, its not just "my logic". Forestry is a science that's hundreds of years old. In North America, outside the unique ecosystem of the Pacific Northwest/Cascadia, where do trees live to 400 years? There's an area in the Niagara Escarpment where the acidic soils have created stunted, dwarf trees (eastern cedar, I believe)that can be 1000 years old, but this is certainly the exception and not the rule. Because they are not esthetically pleasing to the eye, no one except scientists really care.
In fact, most trees in the Pacific Northwest don't (at least on the west side of the Cascades) - forest fires are extremely uncommon due to the wet climate.
Look at a map of North America. Look how puny the "west side of Cascadia" is compared with North America. Your rebuttal is based on your knowledge of a small, unique ecosystem.
forest fires are extremely uncommon due to the wet climate.
Yeah, except I do live "on the west side of Cascadia" you speak of. I admit, it rains from November to March, but we couldn't light campfires all last summer as we could have caused a *gasp* forest fire, the bush was so dry. Thousands of people were evacuated from their homes "in Cascadia" last year, due to forest fires. Or don't you remember this? Care to wager it'll be the same again this summer?
Re:Return on Investment (Score:4, Informative)
Look here [forestnet.com] or here [diveweb.com].
My dad's a woodworker, and he's looked into buying some of the wood for it's overall quality, and some of its VERY unique graining and colouring.
The higher end wood was priced at over $1,000 per board foot (CDN), with the "cheap" high-end stuff being around $200 per board foot. When you consider that a single log (on average) has thousands of board feet in them, the profits are WAY more than $1 per tree!
I wish I could find the pics of some of the finished products, but if you go here [survivorwoods.com] you can see some of the graining of the recovered logs.
There was one 35 foot long board-room table I saw that was $120,000, and it LOOKED like it was worth every penny. It was incredible.
A lot of the local governments are starting to jump in and try and get ownership of the underwater resources, like in Michigan. There's SERIOUS money in it.
Re:Old growth lumber (Score:3, Informative)
Bur oaks bear seed up to an age of 400 years, older than reported for any other American oak. The minimum seed-bearing age is about 35 years, and the optimum is 75 to 150 years
"Bur oak is said to have reached a height of 52 m (170 ft) and a d.b.h. of 213 cm (84 in) in the lower Ohio Valley. On the better sites, mature trees generally grow 24 to 30 in (80 to 100 ft) tall, 91 to 122 cm (36 to 48 in) in d.b.h., and live 200 to 300 years. Characteristically, they have a massive, clear trunk and a broad, open crown of stout branches."
from The Second Link [biologicaldiversity.org]:
In the early 1900's, "mature" ponderosa pines were defined as 200 years old, 300 year old trees were considered "veterans." Today, the Forest Service defines 100 year old trees "old growth."
By 1962, when the Forest Service began region- wide surveys, the forests were already highly degraded, the very largest trees being already logged off. The rule of early forestry was to exclusively and rapidly cut all the largest trees (Drake 1910, Woolsey 1911, Moore 1912). The large trees were eulogized as far back as 1891
The Third Link [findarticles.com]:
Re:Photo??? (Score:3, Informative)
Not in TVA territory... (Score:2, Informative)
Makes sense too, they wanted the money that they could get for them, and in shallow areas leaving the trees standing could create either a navigational hazard as well as potentially creating breeding areas for mosquitoes, if they stuck up above the water's surface.
Re:Fish habitat (Score:4, Informative)
I should also point out that hydroelectric reservoirs are, by definition, artificial habitats, and any fish adapting to them are, also by definition, an introduced species.
My brother and collected Christmas trees one year to dump in a pond we occasionally fished in. We had brim out the yazoo that summer.
Clark's Hill Reservoir, near where I grew up, has lots of submerged trees in it. When water levels fluctuate in the summer, boats collide with treetops where there shouldn't be treetops. Hopefully, this sort of work could make for safer lakes in the process.