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Lewis Grosenbaugh

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Lewis R. Grosenbaugh
BornNovember 4, 1913
East Orange, New Jersey
DiedApril 22, 2003
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materDartmouth College, Yale University
Known forAdvancements in sampling and measurements for forest inventories; Angle gauge sampling; Probability proportional to prediction (3P) sampling;
AwardsBarrington Moore Award and Fellow, Society of American Foresters; Yale University School of Foresty & Environmental Studies Distinguished Alumnus and Distinguished Service Award
Scientific career
FieldsForestry
InstitutionsUS Forest Service

Lewis (Lou) Grosenbaugh is known for his contribution to the fields of forest inventory, forest measurement, and forest management. Grosenbaugh built on Walter Bitterlich's idea of estimating the density of a forest with timber cruising so that individual trees could be used to estimate various stand measures, such as volume per acre.

Legacy

A notable contribution of Grosenbaugh was adapting Bitterlich's techniques to forest inventories throughout the US. Grosenbaugh promoted the findings of European foresters and brought them the researchers and foresters in the US.[1]

Grosenbaugh had pioneered many original thoughts during his work in statistical sampling of trees in forests, including subsampling trees to obtain a volume to basal area ratio.[2]

References


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