Friday Afternoon

Friday afternoon took teachers to Jennings State Forest to learn about public land management and the Urban Interface, followed by a tour of Millenium Specialty Chemicals.


Jennings State Forest Tour

Teachers in Jennings State ForestThe Jennings State Forest encompasses 24,000 acres of land in Middleburg, Florida. Four agencies manage the forest and try to balance public use (recreation, fishing, hunting, timber production) with natural resource conservation making it an ideal location to learn about public land management in the wildland/urban interface. In addition, we learned about state forester's conservation and restoration efforts in the forest. Focus on restoration issues regards to prescribed fire and timber management. Goal is restoring, maintaining native ecosystems.

There was also a presentation about prescribed burning and its role in pine forest management. The forest has 70 miles of boundary which butts up against residential developments. Teachers learned what special considerations needed to be taken to accommodate the residential public living all along the border of the state forest. A key issue is urban fringe conflicts -- neighbors have negative perspectives and lack of understanding. Health and traffic impact of smoke/burning.

Money from legislature is down, need to find new revenue, implemented $1 use fee (honor system).

 

Millennium Chemicals Logo Tour

Millennium Specialty Chemicals processes 10-11 million gallons of turpentine annually making them the largest buyer of turpentine in the world. We visited Millennium's research and development building, one small part of their 59 acre facility in Jacksonville.

Turpentine, which is a by-product of the pulping of pine trees, is received from 60 pulp and paper mills throughout North America. From a ton of wood 1/2 to 2 gallons of turpentine is produced.

Janice and Joe discover some of the aroma chemicals produced by MillenniumAt the Jacksonville plant, turpentine is fractionated into alpha-pinene and beta-pinene, two of its major components. These two materials are the starting points for a host of other chemicals used in the flavors and fragrance industry in food and beverage, household, and personal-care products.

Teachers received a primer in terpine chemistry from Rodney Gorman, Senior Process Chemist with Millennium. Besides talking about the Millennium chemicals and its history he presented how turpentine is broken down into its main constituent materials and how those chemicals can be further processed to make raw materials for a host of flavor and fragrance products used in many common consumer products in stores today. 

Aaron McClain showing some chemical constituents of turpentine From there we visited Aaron McClain, Manager of Quality Assurance in his lab where they check and verify the quality of the products they receive and produce. He showed us a gas chromatograph of turpentine, a pictorial view of its constituent compounds to demonstrate the high levels of alpha- and beta-pinene as well as the lesser constituents. Aaron then showed us some of the tools and processes they use in the lab for quality assurance purposes including: distillation, pyrolysis, re-dox (reduction/oxidization).

Pat Whelan teaching about uses of Millennium chemicals And then we received an enlightening presentation from Pat Whelan about how Millennium chemicals are utilized in flavor and fragrance products. Millennium sells their chemicals to people who make final products such as those that we sampled. The synthesized fragrance products are less expensive than their natural counterparts thus preserving the natural sources.

 

Florida Forestry Friends Sponsored Dinner

The final dinner of the tour will be catered by Chef Jeff at Fort Clinch State Park in Fernandina Beach. Teachers were treated to a tour of the Fort and a taste of 19th century life there. Florida Forestry Friends set up a tent on the beach and the rain let up enough for us to enjoy a relaxing dinner and sunset before heading back to the hotel.

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