hammock cloth - meaning and definition. What is hammock cloth
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What (who) is hammock cloth - definition

ECOSYSTEM IN SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES CONSISTING OF STANDS OF TREES, USUALLY HARDWOOD, THAT FORM AN ECOLOGICAL ISLAND WITHIN A CONTRASTING ECOSYSTEM
Mesic hammock; Xeric hammock; Temperate hardwood hammock; Marine hammock; Prairie hammock; Hydric hammock; Oak dome
  • Fort Mose]] was built on a hammock near [[St. Augustine, Florida]].

Beck Hammock, Florida         
HUMAN SETTLEMENT IN FLORIDA, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Beck Hammock Florida; Beck Hammock, FL; Beck Hammock
Beck Hammock is a neighborhood in Sanford, Florida. It was named "Beck Hammock" after the Beck family that settled in this area.
Floorcloth         
  • Floorcloth in a geometric tile pattern from George Harrison and Co., possibly 1880s
HEAVY TEXTILE, PAINTED OR STAINED, FORMERLY USED AS A DECORATIVE FLOOR COVERING
Floor-cloth; Floorcloths; Floor-cloths; Floor cloth; Floor cloths
A floorcloth, or floor-cloth, is a household furnishing used for warmth, decoration, or to protect expensive carpets. They were primarily produced and used from the early 18th to the early 20th century and were also referred to as oilcloth, wax cloths, and painted canvas.
Cloth hall         
  • Former cloth hall and later town hall of [[Antoing]]
  • [[Leiden]] ([[Holland]]) [[Broadcloth]] Hall: 19th-century view of present-day ''[[Museum De Lakenhal]]'' (Cloth-Hall Museum) of art
  • Ypres Broadcloth Hall]]
  • [[Tournai]] Cloth Hall
HISTORIC BUILDING IN THE MARKETPLACE OF A EUROPEAN TOWN
Cloth Hall; Lakenhal; Linen hall
A cloth hall or linen hall (; ; ; ) is a historic building located in the centre of the main marketplace of a European town. Cloth halls were built from medieval times into the 18th century.

Wikipedia

Hammock (ecology)

Hammock is a term used in the southeastern United States for stands of trees, usually hardwood, that form an ecological island in a contrasting ecosystem. Hammocks grow on elevated areas, often just a few inches high, surrounded by wetlands that are too wet to support them. The term hammock is also applied to stands of hardwood trees growing on slopes between wetlands and drier uplands supporting a mixed or coniferous forest. Types of hammocks found in the United States include tropical hardwood hammocks, temperate hardwood hammocks, and maritime or coastal hammocks. Hammocks are also often classified as hydric (wet soil), mesic (moist soil) or xeric (dry soil). The types are not exclusive, but often grade into each other.

Unlike many ecosystems of the coastal plain of the southeastern United States, hammocks are not tolerant of fire. Hammocks tend to occur in locations where fire is not common, or where there is some protection from fire in neighboring ecosystems. Hammocks have begun developing in historic times in areas where fire has been suppressed through human intervention, or where elevations above wetlands have been created by dredging, mining, road and causeway building, and other human activities. On the other hand, many hammocks have been destroyed by development, as they often occur on higher land in desirable locations, such as barrier islands and other waterfront locations.

The etymology of the term "hammock" is obscure. Dictionaries usually give it as an archaic form of "hummock" ("hammock" appeared in print earlier than "hummock"). "Hammock" is first attested in English in the 1550s as a nautical term for a tree-covered island (a mound of trees) seen on the horizon. "Hammock" is used to refer to stands of hardwood trees on the coastal plain from North Carolina to Mississippi. Types of hammock described in the literature include: