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Coffee Shop
How things used to Look
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<blockquote data-quote="greybeard" data-source="post: 1805629" data-attributes="member: 18945"><p>I've used that website many times to look at topo and soil content type maps. The menu on the left can open lots of options.</p><p></p><p>Here's what most of East Texas and much of the Southeast USA looked like up until the heyday of the timber business in the late 19th & early 1/4 of the 20th century. Longleaf pine forests with little understory, kept clean by natural and native Indian fires. </p><p>[ATTACH=full]30602[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="greybeard, post: 1805629, member: 18945"] I've used that website many times to look at topo and soil content type maps. The menu on the left can open lots of options. Here's what most of East Texas and much of the Southeast USA looked like up until the heyday of the timber business in the late 19th & early 1/4 of the 20th century. Longleaf pine forests with little understory, kept clean by natural and native Indian fires. [ATTACH type="full"]30602[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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