Of or pertaining to a creature or object growing, living, or existing in a woodland
As its name implies, this species Woodlark] is a more woodland bird than the other British Larks, and in many of its ways of life it resembles the Tree Pipit, frequenting the neighborhood of woods and plantations, but always affecting trees.
Any member of the various North American Indian peoples of the largely wooded area stretching east from the Mississippi River valley to the Atlantic coastline and extending north into Canada and south as far as what are now the U.S. states from Illinois to North Carolina. The Indians in this region spoke Iroquoian, Algonquian, and Siouan languages. The heaviest population concentrations were near or along the seacoast, lakes, ponds, marshes, creeks, and rivers. There animals could be hunted, fish caught, birds taken, leaves, seeds, and roots of wild plants gathered, shellfish collected, and crops grown. Certain areas were favoured with resources not found elsewhere in the region. In certain parts of the upper Great Lakes area, wild rice (Zizania aquatica) grew in abundance, and the Menominee especially depended on it. In addition to the Menominee, Eastern Woodlands groups include the Abenaki, Woodland Cree, Delaware, Fox, Huron, Illinois, Iroquois, Mohican, Miami, Micmac, Mohawk, Mohegan, Montagnais and Naskapi, Ojibwa, Oneida, Ottawa, Pequot, Powhatan, Sauk, Seneca, Tuscarora, and Winnebago
A cultural period of the Eastern North American Aborigine Indians dating from 3,000 - 1,300 B P Usually, the presence of pottery differentiates the Woodland culture from the Archaic culture which preceded it
Forest lands stocked with other than timber species (i e , piñon, juniper, mountain mahogany, etc ) Uses of the woodland products are generally limited to firewood, posts, and harvest of piñon pine nuts
some delightful courses have been hewn through forests Because of this they are characterised by well defined fairways, beautiful greens set in amphitheatres of tall trees and not another fairway in sight Stray off-line with the shot and you will be playing at woodpeckers amongst the trees
A period of Native American history beginning 3,000 years ago and ending 1,250 years ago During the Woodland Period, Native Americans developed widespread use of pottery, mound building, gardening, and long-distance trade
Land used primarily for the production of adapted wood crops and to provide tree cover for watershed protection, beautification, etc Does not include farmstead and field windbreak plantings
Open stand of trees up to approximately 18 metres in height in which tree crowns cover at least 30 per cent of the land area but are, for the most part, not overlapping