Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lookout_tree> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 42 of
42
with 100 triples per page.
- Lookout_tree abstract "A lookout tree is a simple fire lookout created by attaching a ladder or a series of spikes to a tall straight tree with a view of the surrounding lands, allowing rangers or fire crews to conveniently climb the tree to survey their surroundings. The simplest kind consist only of a ladder to a suitable height: this kind was called a \"ladder tree.\" Some ladder trees had platforms on the ground next to them for maps and a fire finder. A more elaborate version often created a platform on top of the tree trunk by cutting off approximately the last 10 feet (3.0 m) of the treetop and building a railed wooden platform on the resulting stump. These \"platform trees\" were often equipped with telephones, fire finder tables, seats and guy wires. Accommodation for the watcher was provided by a tent or shelter at the bottom of the tree.Lookout trees were widely used in the Kaibab National Forest of northern Arizona, and Washington, USA as well as in Australia. The Dave Evans Bicentennial Tree in Western Australia reaches 75m, while the tallest lookout in the United States was the Cook Creek Spar Tree near Lake Quinault, Washington, USA, at 179 feet (55 m) high from 1927 to 1955.".
- Lookout_tree thumbnail ClimbingTheGloucesterTree_2005_SeanMcClean.jpg?width=300.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageExternalLink pembertons-climbing-trees.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageID "36528913".
- Lookout_tree wikiPageLength "4367".
- Lookout_tree wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Lookout_tree wikiPageRevisionID "672705111".
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Arizona.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fire_lookout_towers.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Category:Wildland_fire_suppression.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Civilian_Conservation_Corps.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Darrington,_Washington.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Dave_Evans_Bicentennial_Tree.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Diamond_Tree.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Eucalyptus_diversicolor.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Fire_lookout.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Gloucester_Tree.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Kaibab_National_Forest.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Quinault.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Lookout_trees_in_Kaibab_National_Forest.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink National_Register_of_Historic_Places.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Osborne_Fire_Finder.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Washington_(state).
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink Western_Australia.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLink File:ClimbingTheGloucesterTree_2005_SeanMcClean.jpg.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLinkText "Lookout tree".
- Lookout_tree wikiPageWikiLinkText "lookout tree".
- Lookout_tree wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Convert.
- Lookout_tree wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Lookout_tree subject Category:Fire_lookout_towers.
- Lookout_tree subject Category:Wildland_fire_suppression.
- Lookout_tree hypernym Lookout.
- Lookout_tree type Building.
- Lookout_tree comment "A lookout tree is a simple fire lookout created by attaching a ladder or a series of spikes to a tall straight tree with a view of the surrounding lands, allowing rangers or fire crews to conveniently climb the tree to survey their surroundings. The simplest kind consist only of a ladder to a suitable height: this kind was called a \"ladder tree.\" Some ladder trees had platforms on the ground next to them for maps and a fire finder.".
- Lookout_tree label "Lookout tree".
- Lookout_tree sameAs Q6675524.
- Lookout_tree sameAs m.0kg1czl.
- Lookout_tree sameAs Q6675524.
- Lookout_tree wasDerivedFrom Lookout_tree?oldid=672705111.
- Lookout_tree depiction ClimbingTheGloucesterTree_2005_SeanMcClean.jpg.
- Lookout_tree isPrimaryTopicOf Lookout_tree.