clearcut


An area of forest where every tree has been felled in a single operation, leaving behind a field of stumps, slash, and exposed soil. The word describes both the practice and the result. From above, clearcuts appear as sharp-edged geometric patches — rectangles and polygons — imposed on the organic curves of the forest. They are the most visible marks that industrial forestry leaves on the land.
Etymology
English compound — to cut clear, to cut clean. The term is neutral in forestry but carries condemnation in conservation.
forest human settlement
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