Jones I.R. & Allen E. (2002) Detection of large woody debris accumulations in 
old-growth forests using sonic wave collection. Transactions of the important 
tree scientists 120(2): 201-209.

Synopsis: "results show strongly that if a tree does fall in the forest, and no 
one hears it, it does indeed make a sound".

Sent from my iPhone

> On Mar 24, 2015, at 10:54 AM, Gary Grossman <gross...@uga.edu> wrote:
> 
> I'm looking for funny articles published and a few come to mind that I
> can't remember citations for so I thought I'd ask here.  I don't really
> want to page through J. Irreproducable Results or Worm Runner's Digest but
> there are a few I'm hoping someone can help me with (vice vis pdfs)
> 
> In either the late 70's or 80's there was a note in Nature that comprised
> the poem and reviewers comments on Shelley's *"Ozymandias*"
> 
> Then at about the same time someone published a paper in Limn. & Ocean.
> estimating the biomass of the Loch Ness monster.
> 
> And also at some point someone published a satirical paper on "if no one
> heard it, did the tree in the forest really fall?"
> 
> Of course any other humorous gems would be appreciated.
> Please remember the list doesn't allow attachments, so please respond to my
> university email.
> 
> TIA, g2
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Gary D. Grossman, PhD
> 
> Professor of Animal Ecology
> Warnell School of Forestry & Natural Resources
> University of Georgia
> Athens, GA, USA 30602
> 
> http://grossman.myweb.uga.edu/ <http://www.arches.uga.edu/%7Egrossman>
> 
> Board of Editors - Animal Biodiversity and Conservation
> Editorial Board - Freshwater Biology
> Editorial Board - Ecology Freshwater Fish

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