Wood Handbook, Wood as an Engineering Material

(Wang) #1
Species Descriptions
In this chapter, each species or group of species is described
in terms of its principal location, characteristics, and uses.
More detailed information on the properties of these and
other species is given in various tables throughout this
handbook. Information on historical and traditional uses is
provided for some species to illustrate their utility. A low-
magnification micrograph of a representative cross-section
of each species or species group accompanies each descrip-
tion. The slides for these micrographs are from the Forest
Products Laboratory collection. The micrographs are printed
at magnifications of approximately 15×. Their color is a
consequence of the stains used to accentuate anatomical fea-
tures and is not indicative of the actual wood color.

U.S. Hardwoods
Alder, Red
Red alder (Alnus rubra)
grows along the Pacific
coast between Alaska and
California. It is the principal
hardwood for commercial

Drying of Wood 13–


products in Oregon and
Washington and the most
abundant commercial hardwood species in these two
states.
The wood of red alder varies from almost white to pale
pinkish brown, and there is no visible boundary between
heartwood and sapwood. Red alder is moderately light in
weight and intermediate in most strength properties but low
in shock resistance. It has relatively low shrinkage.
The principal use of red alder is for furniture, but it is also
used for sash and door panel stock and other millwork.
Ash (Black Ash Group)
The black ash group includes
black ash (Fraxinus nigra)
and pumpkin ash (F. profun‑
da). Black ash grows in the
Northeast and Midwest, and
pumpkin ash in the South.
The heartwood of black ash
is a darker brown than that of
American white ash; the sapwood is light-colored or nearly
white. The wood of the black ash group is lighter in weight
(basic specific gravity of 0.45 to 0.48) than that of the white
ash group (basic specific gravity greater than 0.50).
Principal uses for the black ash group are decorative veneer,
cabinets, millwork, furniture, cooperage, and crates.
Ash (White Ash Group)
Important species of the
white ash group are Ameri-
can white ash (Fraxinus
americana), green ash
(F. pennsylvanica), blue
ash (F. quadrangulata), and
Oregon ash (F. latifolia).
The first three species grow
in the eastern half of the United States. Oregon ash grows
along the Pacific Coast.
The heartwood of the white ash group is brown, and the
sapwood is light-colored or nearly white. Second-growth
trees are particularly sought after because of the inherent
qualities of the wood from these trees: it is heavy, strong,
hard, and stiff, and it has high resistance to shock. Oregon
ash has somewhat lower strength properties than American

Table 2–1. Major resources of U.S. woods according to
region


Western


Northern
and Appalachian Southern
Hardwoods
Alder, red Ash Ash
Ash, Oregon Aspen Basswood
Aspen Basswood Beech
Birch, paper Beech Butternut
Cottonwood Birch Cottonwood
Maple, bigleaf Buckeye Elm
Oak, California black Butternut Hackberry
Oak, Oregon white Cherry Hickory
Tanoak Cottonwood Honeylocust
Elm Locust, black
Hackberry Magnolia
Hickory Maple, soft
Honeylocust Oak, red and white
Locust, black Sassafras
Maple, hard Sweetgum
Maple, soft Sycamore
Oak, red and white Tupelo
Sycamore Walnut
Walnut Willow
Yellow-poplar Yellow-poplar
Softwoods
Douglas-fir Cedar, northern white Baldcypress
Fir, western Fir, balsam Cedar, Atlantic white
Hemlock, western
and mountain


Hemlock, eastern
Pine, eastern white

Fir, Fraser
Pine, southern
Incense-cedar Pine, Jack Redcedar, eastern
Larch, western Pine, red
Pine, lodgepole Redcedar, eastern
Pine, ponderosa Spruce, eastern
Pine, sugar Tamarack
Pine, western white
Port-Orford-cedar
Redcedar, western
Redwood
Spruce, Engelmann
Spruce, Sitka
Yellow-cedar


Chapter 2 Characteristics and Availability of Commercially Important Woods

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