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Tree Height
Measurement by
Michael Kuhns, Extension Forestry Specialist
You can measure
heights of very tall objects such as trees by projecting a right
triangle (one that includes a 90 degree angle) using your arm, a
stick, and your line-of sight.
Procedure
1. Get a stick that is
equal in length to the distance from your eye (cheekbone) to your
fingers when your arm is fully extended in front of your face. Break
off part of the stick or mark it at the correct length if you don't
find one that is exactly right.
2.
Grasp the stick by the tips of the thumb and index finger and hold
it out in front of you with your arm fully extended. The stick must
be held vertical.
3. Walk toward or away
from the tree until the tip of the stick is visually lined up with
the top of the tree and the bottom of the stick is lined up with
the bottom of the tree. Your line of sight to the tree base should
be as close as possible to horizontal. In sighting to the top and
bottom of the stick rotate your eye rather than your head.
4. The distance from
your eye to the base of the tree is equal to the height of the tree.
Measure this distance with a measuring tape. If no long-distance
measuring device is available, calibrate your step (the walking
distance between your two feet--walk normal, don't stretch) or pace
(walking distance for two steps) over a known distance (say 50 feet).
Then measure the distance A-D in paces or steps and convert to feet,
meters, etc.
Questions:
1. How would you adapt this to a 30-60-90 triangle?
2. What if the tree is
leaning toward or away from you or to one side?
3. What are the possible
sources of error?
4. Should everyone doing
this end up the same distance from the tree (yes), or will it depend
on their height or the length of their stick (no)?
5. What if you can't
get level with the base of the tree?
6. What else could you
measure the height of using this technique and how?
7. Could you measure
width?
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