Productivity With Trees And Crops On Surface-Mined Lands - What Do We Mean By Productivity?

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
W. Clark Ashby
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
7
File Size:
596 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

Productivity is a fascinating concept. Like motherhood or apple pie, we know it as a good thing. Just what it means is not so clear. To a coal miner we assume it means tons of coal hauled from the mine. To the company president it means profit after capital, labor, and other costs have also been reckoned. To the government economist it means output in a balance of payments. What does it mean to the biologist, and can reclamation really be productive? In this paper we discuss productivity from a biological viewpoint, give some yield data for various types of reclamation plantings, and discuss how our demand for or acceptance of differing kinds of productivity is tied up in bigger questions of land use, environmental stability, and resource allocation.
Citation

APA: W. Clark Ashby  (1981)  Productivity With Trees And Crops On Surface-Mined Lands - What Do We Mean By Productivity?

MLA: W. Clark Ashby Productivity With Trees And Crops On Surface-Mined Lands - What Do We Mean By Productivity?. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1981.

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