Major uses of the Nation's nearly 2.3 billion acres of land in 1987 were: cropland, 464 million acres (20 percent); grassland pasture and range, 591 million acres (26 percent); forest land (exclusive of areas in parks and some other special uses), 648 million acres (29 percent); special uses, 279 million acres (12 percent); and miscellaneous other land, 282 million acres (13 percent). During 1982-87, changes in U.S. cropland, grassland pasture and range, and forest land acreages were quite small, but land in these uses declined. By contrast, special uses (which include parks, wilderness, wildlife, and related uses) and miscellaneous other land (which includes urban land) increased by a combined 3 percent
Changes in the use of land in the United States produce significant economic and environmental effec...
Excerpt from report summary: Planted acreage in 1961 was the smallest since 1930, a peak year for to...
More new cropland is developed each year in the United States than is lost to urban development. Wh...
Major uses of the Nation's nearly 2.3 billion acres of land in 1992 were: cropland, 460 million acre...
Major uses of the Nation's 2,265 million acres of land in 1982 were: cropland, 469 million acres; g...
Major primary uses of the U.S. land area of 2,264 million acres in 1978 were: cropland, 471 million ...
The United States has a total land area of nearly 2.3 billion acres. Major uses in 1997 were forest...
Preliminary State-by-State estimates of the major uses of land in the United States in 1982 and a br...
This publication presents the results of the latest (2002) inventory of U.S. major land uses, drawin...
The United States has a total land area of nearly 2.3 billion acres. In 2007, the major land uses we...
The United States has a total land area of about 2.3 billion acres. In 2012, the major land uses wer...
This report summarizes the extent and distribution of major land uses in the United States and, by c...
This study updates an earlier assessment of the past, current, and prospective situation for the Nat...
Global agricultural demand spurred expansion of U.S. cropland use over the last decade to a record 3...
Excerpt from report summary: Nearly three-fifths of the land area of the United States is used to pr...
Changes in the use of land in the United States produce significant economic and environmental effec...
Excerpt from report summary: Planted acreage in 1961 was the smallest since 1930, a peak year for to...
More new cropland is developed each year in the United States than is lost to urban development. Wh...
Major uses of the Nation's nearly 2.3 billion acres of land in 1992 were: cropland, 460 million acre...
Major uses of the Nation's 2,265 million acres of land in 1982 were: cropland, 469 million acres; g...
Major primary uses of the U.S. land area of 2,264 million acres in 1978 were: cropland, 471 million ...
The United States has a total land area of nearly 2.3 billion acres. Major uses in 1997 were forest...
Preliminary State-by-State estimates of the major uses of land in the United States in 1982 and a br...
This publication presents the results of the latest (2002) inventory of U.S. major land uses, drawin...
The United States has a total land area of nearly 2.3 billion acres. In 2007, the major land uses we...
The United States has a total land area of about 2.3 billion acres. In 2012, the major land uses wer...
This report summarizes the extent and distribution of major land uses in the United States and, by c...
This study updates an earlier assessment of the past, current, and prospective situation for the Nat...
Global agricultural demand spurred expansion of U.S. cropland use over the last decade to a record 3...
Excerpt from report summary: Nearly three-fifths of the land area of the United States is used to pr...
Changes in the use of land in the United States produce significant economic and environmental effec...
Excerpt from report summary: Planted acreage in 1961 was the smallest since 1930, a peak year for to...
More new cropland is developed each year in the United States than is lost to urban development. Wh...