Abstract
The essentials of Hohenadl's method of stem form and stem volume estimation were outlined. Application of the method was exemplified in a study of 37 dominant and codominant lodgepole pines grown in Alberta. Form of Alberta-grown pine was compared with that of British Columbia-grown pine. Hohenadl's method was found to be a convenient means of estimating both form and volume. For 80 per cent of the lower bole, overbark form of pine from Alberta did not differ appreciably from underbark form of pine from British Columbia.

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