Journal article 1332 views 322 downloads
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri
Dendrochronologia
Swansea University Author:
Mary Gagen
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DOI (Published version): 10.1016/j.dendro.2015.07.004
Abstract
One of the greatest challenges to developing time series from non-annual ring forming tropical trees arises before sampling. Tropical trees can be exceptionally hard, often containing chemicals and minerals which make the wood near non-biodegradable. Such trees have considerable palaeoclimatic poten...
| Published in: | Dendrochronologia |
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| Published: |
2015
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| URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa22963 |
| first_indexed |
2015-08-25T02:12:40Z |
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| last_indexed |
2019-05-31T22:18:14Z |
| id |
cronfa22963 |
| recordtype |
SURis |
| fullrecord |
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| spelling |
2019-05-30T14:48:42.8376847 v2 22963 2015-08-24 On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri e677a6d0777aed90ac1eca8937e43d2b 0000-0002-6820-6457 Mary Gagen Mary Gagen true false 2015-08-24 BGPS One of the greatest challenges to developing time series from non-annual ring forming tropical trees arises before sampling. Tropical trees can be exceptionally hard, often containing chemicals and minerals which make the wood near non-biodegradable. Such trees have considerable palaeoclimatic potential due to their longevity but are challenging to sample non-destructively. The hardest of these trees, the Ironwoods, are often the target of sampling campaigns as their properties are associated with longevity. Our objective was to develop a low-technology drill-borer capable of extracting cores from the Borneo Ironwood (Eusideroxylon zwageri Teijsm. and Binn) of a suitable diameter for carrying out stable isotopic analysis and radiocarbon analysis (necessary for chronology development in non-annual ring forming trees). Due to the inaccessibility of tropical sampling field sites our criteria for development included: construction to be from readily available and replaceable parts; power to be derived from batteries; the main body to be of a weight and size appropriate to sampling in remote locations; a system operable with minimal training by a non-expert. The cores produced by our drill system were of high quality, and samples could successfully be taken from extremely hard trees without charring. This trial is the first successful non-destructive sampling of living E. zwageri, a species which has considerable palaeoclimatic potential. Journal Article Dendrochronologia palaeoclimate, tree ring science, tropical dendroclimatology, sampling methods, core drill 31 10 2015 2015-10-31 10.1016/j.dendro.2015.07.004 COLLEGE NANME Biosciences Geography and Physics School COLLEGE CODE BGPS Swansea University 2019-05-30T14:48:42.8376847 2015-08-24T15:56:39.2637818 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography Rosannah E. Williams 1 Mary Gagen 0000-0002-6820-6457 2 Rory P.D. Walsh 3 Kawi Bidin 4 0022963-14032018112750.pdf 22963.pdf 2018-03-14T11:27:50.7300000 Output 584687 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2015-08-24T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
| title |
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri |
| spellingShingle |
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri Mary Gagen |
| title_short |
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri |
| title_full |
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri |
| title_fullStr |
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri |
| title_full_unstemmed |
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri |
| title_sort |
On the development of a drill-borer for sampling tropical supra-hardwoods; a review of drill- an example using the Borneo Ironwood Eusideroxylon zwageri |
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e677a6d0777aed90ac1eca8937e43d2b |
| author_id_fullname_str_mv |
e677a6d0777aed90ac1eca8937e43d2b_***_Mary Gagen |
| author |
Mary Gagen |
| author2 |
Rosannah E. Williams Mary Gagen Rory P.D. Walsh Kawi Bidin |
| format |
Journal article |
| container_title |
Dendrochronologia |
| publishDate |
2015 |
| institution |
Swansea University |
| doi_str_mv |
10.1016/j.dendro.2015.07.004 |
| college_str |
Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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facultyofscienceandengineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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facultyofscienceandengineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
| department_str |
School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography |
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1 |
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| description |
One of the greatest challenges to developing time series from non-annual ring forming tropical trees arises before sampling. Tropical trees can be exceptionally hard, often containing chemicals and minerals which make the wood near non-biodegradable. Such trees have considerable palaeoclimatic potential due to their longevity but are challenging to sample non-destructively. The hardest of these trees, the Ironwoods, are often the target of sampling campaigns as their properties are associated with longevity. Our objective was to develop a low-technology drill-borer capable of extracting cores from the Borneo Ironwood (Eusideroxylon zwageri Teijsm. and Binn) of a suitable diameter for carrying out stable isotopic analysis and radiocarbon analysis (necessary for chronology development in non-annual ring forming trees). Due to the inaccessibility of tropical sampling field sites our criteria for development included: construction to be from readily available and replaceable parts; power to be derived from batteries; the main body to be of a weight and size appropriate to sampling in remote locations; a system operable with minimal training by a non-expert. The cores produced by our drill system were of high quality, and samples could successfully be taken from extremely hard trees without charring. This trial is the first successful non-destructive sampling of living E. zwageri, a species which has considerable palaeoclimatic potential. |
| published_date |
2015-10-31T03:40:32Z |
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1851634674578751488 |
| score |
11.089718 |

