Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 11 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 47835 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 76 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 illustration 6 tree 4 wood 4 United 4 States 3 forest 3 Service 3 National 3 Forest 2 year 2 soil 2 fire 2 Ranger 2 New 2 Mr. 2 Forester 2 Europe 2 California 2 CHAPTER 1 work 1 way 1 water 1 time 1 timber 1 remarks 1 quality 1 plant 1 physical 1 man 1 look 1 little 1 like 1 light 1 leave 1 growth 1 good 1 foot 1 figure 1 father 1 day 1 cross 1 crop 1 common 1 color 1 characteristics 1 branch 1 bird 1 animal 1 York 1 Yew Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2720 tree 1950 forest 1671 wood 1028 year 931 timber 916 fire 842 illustration 771 man 761 time 642 soil 634 foot 575 land 565 water 531 part 517 work 514 use 491 life 472 way 467 growth 462 leave 422 day 407 country 389 branch 372 place 371 ground 367 seed 341 plant 340 condition 334 bark 323 house 322 pine 317 size 304 mountain 301 list 299 people 296 kind 287 specie 283 light 278 thing 278 bird 275 state 274 hand 265 method 262 number 260 lumber 259 crop 254 father 248 diameter 240 side 240 cent Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4108 _ 1103 Forest 768 National 468 Grace 457 Forests 452 Melbury 332 Winterborne 318 Fig 299 States 296 Service 293 Fitzpiers 271 | 263 Giles 257 Mrs. 210 Hintock 209 New 199 Mr. 198 United 179 Charmond 164 California 155 Forester 148 . 144 Section 141 S. 138 Marty 127 Oak 118 FOREST 113 White 111 South 107 Forestry 103 U. 101 pith 94 Europe 93 England 89 North 87 Government 85 Washington 85 Pine 84 W. 84 District 83 C. 81 Nature 80 Ranger 77 State 77 Colorado 76 West 76 Supervisor 76 Oregon 74 CHAPTER 71 Tangential Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4733 it 2813 he 2068 she 2054 i 1955 they 1450 you 1201 we 929 him 908 them 855 her 450 me 254 us 184 himself 124 itself 114 herself 112 themselves 42 myself 41 one 34 ''em 24 thee 20 mine 19 ourselves 18 yourself 9 yours 9 his 9 hers 6 ye 5 ours 4 theirs 2 thyself 2 pin 2 em 1 you''ve 1 yerself 1 winterborne 1 ung 1 on''t 1 o 1 hills!--no 1 cowper:-- 1 ch 1 ay 1 --they 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 17829 be 5447 have 1739 do 1255 make 1099 say 874 see 752 go 718 come 694 grow 645 know 623 take 572 use 526 find 461 give 427 leave 407 think 400 become 399 cut 366 get 349 keep 346 look 335 stand 321 call 296 show 294 form 280 live 255 seem 249 plant 246 begin 241 bring 237 produce 235 fall 233 tell 231 work 231 turn 210 follow 209 cover 208 pass 204 hear 202 carry 198 reach 198 put 197 remain 186 require 186 protect 182 appear 175 need 173 increase 166 lose 162 mean Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2958 not 1136 more 1082 so 979 other 910 very 819 well 775 now 746 great 730 many 724 large 682 only 665 much 662 up 635 good 620 as 605 long 593 most 579 out 577 such 531 little 511 also 492 then 465 first 452 young 422 small 382 down 366 even 363 old 363 here 357 high 351 away 342 still 326 few 321 often 307 there 305 far 296 same 281 white 277 own 277 once 276 almost 269 too 260 less 256 soon 253 new 253 different 252 just 248 never 248 again 245 thus Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 290 good 171 most 93 least 76 great 65 large 37 Most 28 fine 27 high 21 bad 18 near 15 small 12 late 11 low 11 early 9 slight 9 rich 8 strong 8 short 7 young 6 old 6 full 6 dear 5 topmost 5 poor 5 dense 4 weak 4 long 4 lofty 4 grand 4 easy 3 wise 3 wild 3 warm 3 straight 3 pure 3 noble 3 innermost 3 common 3 cold 2 wide 2 true 2 tall 2 safe 2 odd 2 mere 2 light 2 inf 2 hardy 2 happy 2 gentle Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 422 most 98 well 28 least 2 hard 1 worst 1 lest 1 keenest 1 infest 1 easiest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 forests are now 7 soil is not 6 trees do not 6 wood is soft 5 trees are not 5 wood is also 4 melbury did not 4 tree does not 4 tree is easily 4 wood is hard 3 forest is more 3 forest is not 3 forests are not 3 melbury had not 3 tree is not 3 tree is now 3 tree is very 3 trees are as 3 trees are sometimes 3 water is shallow 3 wood is light 3 wood is much 3 wood is not 2 _ use _ 2 branches are numerous 2 branches are short 2 country is rich 2 fire does not 2 fires are much 2 fires are not 2 fires are now 2 fires are sometimes 2 fires have less 2 forest is now 2 forests are also 2 forests are open 2 forests are practically 2 forests do not 2 forests have also 2 forests have now 2 forests is severe 2 grace was not 2 lands are therefore 2 life was short 2 melbury was much 2 melbury was not 2 men are not 2 men making fresh 2 soil does not 2 soil is deep Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 trees are not so 1 _ is not entirely 1 branches are not less 1 fires are not as 1 fires are not usually 1 fires do not permanently 1 forest is not irremediable 1 forest is not merely 1 forests are not as 1 forests are not subject 1 forests is no small 1 grace thought no more 1 growth is not unnecessarily 1 land is not capable 1 melbury said no more 1 men are not gods 1 men had no idea 1 part is not yet 1 place were no good 1 soil is not essentially 1 soil is not now 1 soil is not rich 1 soil is not secure 1 soil is not well 1 time is not always 1 time was no object 1 tree gives no idea 1 tree is not less 1 tree is not very 1 trees are not usually 1 water did not easily 1 water is no longer 1 wood is not homogeneous 1 works have no equals A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 31994 author = Allen, G. F. (Grenville F.) title = The Forests of Mount Rainier National Park date = keywords = Douglas; FIG; Mount; Rainier; illustration summary = Douglas fir and western hemlock at the lower limits of the type, and fir trees that stand singly on the greensward of the open parks bring to flattened mountain hemlocks, alpine firs, and the white-bark pines The extreme limit of tree growth on Mount Rainier is 7,600 feet above forest of large and old Douglas fir and western hemlock. Mountain hemlock and alpine fir succeed the trees of the lower feet, but is a small and insignificant tree in the high mountains. Next to the Douglas fir the western hemlock is the most abundant tree in Although the western white pine is not a common tree in the park, it is common tree in the park at elevations above 4,500 feet. With the Douglas fir, hemlock, and red cedar it forms the dense forest In the mountain parks it is a handsome tree 50 to 60 feet high. id = 42391 author = Boerker, Richard H. D. (Richard Hans Douai) title = Our National Forests A Short Popular Account of the Work of the United States Forest Service on the National Forests date = keywords = Act; California; Colorado; District; Forest; Forester; Government; National; Ranger; Service; States; Supervisor; United; Washington; figure; fire; illustration summary = Government, the land and the timber is returned to the National Forest National Forests have on them large areas of steep mountain slopes the fiscal year 1917 timber sales on the National Forests the sale and cutting of timber on the National Forests and coƶperates with States in protecting forest lands under Section 2 of the Weeks Law. The Branch of Research has supervision over the investigative work of arise on the National Forests such as cases of timber, fire, and grazing National Forest lands which are capable of producing timber and valuable on National Forest lands without permit; grazing stock on areas which use of National Forest land without a permit for any purpose for which timber cut on the National Forests. When timber on National Forest land is cut, damaged, killed, or other stock grazed on National Forest land under permit. of the season during which the stock use National Forest lands. id = 26935 author = Fairbanks, Harold W. (Harold Wellman) title = Conservation Reader date = keywords = CHAPTER; California; Fairbanks; Indians; Nature; animal; bird; forest; illustration; soil; tree; water summary = Nature is very careful in her way and never makes the soil poor by The natural wealth of our country is its soil, water, forests, minerals, the birds carried the seed to the open fields and so the forests began forest trees than it is to destroy the species of animals and birds. animals and birds that destroy vast numbers of useful ones. there many years, that we may learn just how Nature makes the soil. The part of the soil which the water carried away to form the rich The roots of the tree grip the soil like the fingers of a great hand.] [Illustration: A forest of great trees in the Sierras, near the Yosemite Although man has more need for forest trees than has any other animal, The work of the water where the forest has been cut away.] the flowers, trees, birds, and animals as they were before the country id = 62686 author = Fernow, B. E. (Bernhard Eduard) title = Forestry for Farmers date = keywords = crop; forest; growth; illustration; light; soil; tree; wood summary = No trees grow to the best advantage in very dry or very wet soil, available to the roots--that is the soil on which all trees grow most development of the tree, namely, with reference to soil conditions, Favorable soil conditions, then, require shade, while wood growth is Like the wheat or corn plant, the tree seed require as conditions for Hence, in forest planting, trees are placed and kept for some time because form development and soil conditions require shade, the total crop shows at 100 years a close cover, with hardly 300 trees to the keep the soil open, until it is shaded by the young trees, which may Besides reproducing a wood crop from the seed of mother trees or by amount of wood growth in the most desirable form of which the soil and the branch growth of those trees which are to become timber wood is id = 482 author = Hardy, Thomas title = The Woodlanders date = keywords = CHAPTER; Charmond; Creedle; Edgar; Felice; Fitzpiers; Giles; Grace; Grammer; Hintock; House; Marty; Melbury; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Oliver; Sherton; South; Suke; Tim; Winterborne; day; father; good; like; little; look; man; time; way summary = "Mr. Winterborne''s father walked with her at one time," said old skeleton, and the face of Giles Winterborne, brought Grace Melbury to way-side along which Grace must pass on her return from Hintock House. When he reached home that evening, he said to Grace and Mrs. Melbury, "Of course I couldn''t let you, Grace!" said Giles, with some distress. "How well she looks this morning!" said Grace, forgetting Mrs. Charmond''s slight in her generous admiration. to work upon Grace; and hence, when Melbury saw the young man "I am glad you don''t object," said Fitzpiers, almost wishing that Grace said in a matter-of-fact way, "Of course, Grace; go to the door with between Fitzpiers and Mrs. Charmond, Grace was looking out of her "I''ve come all the way from London to-day," said Fitzpiers. Her father said nothing more, and Grace went away to the solitude of id = 35419 author = Noyes, William title = Wood and Forest date = keywords = APPEARANCE; Fig; Forest; HABITAT; Leaf; Radial; Section; Service; States; Tangential; United; characteristics; color; common; cross; illustration; physical; quality; remarks; tree; wood summary = identification of woods which appears in Forest Service Bulletin No. 10, _Timber_, by Filibert Roth. Also, the terms used by lumbermen, "hard woods" for broad-leaved trees In a transverse section of a conifer, for example Douglas spruce, Fig. 8, the wood is seen to lie in concentric rings, the outer part of the In a cross-section, say of oak, Fig. 14, it can readily be seen that some pith rays begin at the center the tree, as the cambium cells form new wood each year. Cross-section of Non-porous Wood, White Pine, Cross-section of Ring-porous Wood, White Ash, distinguish such ring-porous woods as have large prominent pores, like and, in regular grained wood like pine, because the cells are radially color, sap-wood, nearly white; non-porous; rings, fine but distinct; non-porous; rings summer wood broad, dark; grain, straight; rays, sap-wood whitish; non-porous; rings, distinct; grain, straight; rays, Since by far the greater number of timber trees grow in the forest, in id = 11587 author = Pack, Charles Lathrop title = The School Book of Forestry date = keywords = Alaska; National; New; States; United; fire; forest; timber; tree; wood; year summary = Forest Fires Destroy Millions of Dollars Worth of Timber Every Year Forest Management Provides for Cutting Mature Trees The trees of the forest grow by forming new layers of wood forester who sets out trees tries to provide conditions which The power of the trees and forest soil to absorb water regulates IMPORTANT FOREST TREES AND THEIR USES IMPORTANT FOREST TREES AND THEIR USES beautiful trees of the forest, produce lumber which is suitable hold contracts to cut timber in the National Forest are required Forest insects and tree diseases occasion heavy losses each year constantly at work in the forests injuring or killing live trees protect the forest and insure a future crop of trees on the area. log the timber and load the lumber directly from the forests to The timber in the Tongass National Forest runs 60 per cent. planting between 12,000,000 and 15,000,000 young forest trees a id = 31367 author = Pinchot, Gifford title = The Training of a Forester date = keywords = FOREST; Forester; National; Ranger; Service; States; United; work summary = The United States Forest Service is responsible both for the general The United States Forest Service consists, first, of a protective force The work of a Forest Ranger is, first of all, to protect the District are the preparation of working plans for the use of the forest by On many of the National Forests the need for immediate use of the timber understanding which a Forester must have with the men who use, or work "practical" men with whom the Forester must do his work--lumbermen, The publications of the United States Forest Service include by far the The office work needed in the mapping of the National Forests, with technical men in charge of practical forestry on the National Forests. work of forest organization in the Government Service in the United best fit him for the work of a Forester in the United States. of the practice of forestry in National and State Forests everywhere. id = 41175 author = Tyas, Robert title = Woodland Gleanings: Being an Account of British Forest-Trees date = keywords = Ash; Beech; Britain; Cedar; Elm; England; Europe; Fir; Flowers; Forest; Fruit; Gilpin; Larch; Oak; Scotch; Scotland; Willow; Yew; branch; foot; illustration; leave; tree; wood; year summary = time each tree expanded its buds and unfolded its leaves; imagining, and as trees and shrubs, bud, leaf, and flower, shed their leaves in every As the summer advances, forest-trees assume a beautiful variety. beautiful trees of a heavy, as well as of a light form, yet their deciduous tree just coming into leaf, a natural good effect of light and The Copse is a species of scenery composed generally of forest-trees, "the generality of trees acquire picturesque beauty by age; but it is beautiful as well as valuable tree, growing generally to a greater In favourable situations, the common Elm becomes a large timber-tree, of planted in a forest, where, mixed with oak, or ash, or other trees of He also compares a gray-headed old man to an aged Oak-tree, covered with This tree grows to the height of forty or fifty feet, spreading at the id = 32141 author = Various title = Garden and Forest Weekly, Volume 1 No. 1, February 29, 1888 date = keywords = Europe; Gray; Massachusetts; Mr.; New; Pine; White; York; illustration; plant; tree summary = describe new and little-known plants (especially North American) of planting of private gardens and grounds, small and large, and will FLOWER MARKETS:--New York--Philadelphia--Boston 12 "Characters of Certain New Species of Plants Collected in Japan" plants arranged, nature and the artist must work a long time together The new plant is of tufted growth, with a dense mass of fronds night and day from the time the plants are brought in until the flower If we plant a tree forming a wood of low [Illustration: Advertisement SEEDS ROSES PLANTS] All kinds of Plants, Roses, Fruit Trees, etc., that can be imported best work on hardy plants published in this country, and contains many Our Catalogue of new, rare and beautiful Plants for 1888 will be [Illustration: New and Rare Trees and Shrubs] of everything that is new, useful and rare in Seeds and Plants,