...soyauxii 9.89 Sycamore maple Acer pseudoplatanus 9.86 Peruvian Walnut Juglans neotropica 9.86 Blue Ash Fraxinus quadrangulata 9.84 Ebiara Berlinia spp. 9.82 Burma Padauk Pterocarpus macrocarpus 9.80 Sweet Cherry Prunus avium...
...NORTH AMERICA Alder, Red Ash, White Baldcypress Basswood Birch, Yellow Box Elder Butternut Cedar, Eastern Red Cedar, Western Red Cherry, Black Chestnut, American Elm, Red Fir, Douglas Hickory, Shagbark Locust,...
...Rhamnaceae > Included Genera Alphitonia (Australian ash) genus View the complete genus profile page Berchemia (ivorywood) genus View the complete genus profile page Ceanothus...
...mahogany – Grain might be a little plain, but the pattern looks right, and the weight feels close. White ash – The color and coarse grain looks like ash, though...
...sometimes confused with ash (Fraxinus spp.), though the two can be separated based on elm’s wavy latewood bands. White Ash (endgrain 10x), may exhibit mild ulmiform patterning, but it’s not...
...most at-risk category there is. This at-risk species would be ash, due to the emerald ash borer. Just because it’s been listed on the Red List doesn’t have any legal...
...are initially divided into three main categories according to the arrangement of their pores, commonly called its porosity. Porosity Ring-porous European ash (endgrain 10x) European Ash (Fraxinus excelsior) is an...