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Acacia melanoxylon, commonly known as the Australian blackwood, is an Acacia species native to south-eastern Australia. The species is also known as blackwood , hickory , mudgerabah , Tasmanian blackwood , or blackwood acacia .
Tassie Timber Challenge Design a dining table for their terrace Rare Tasmanian timbers worth between $18-35k to be used to create their table: 1st ($35,000 Blackheart Sassafras Timber) 2nd ($25,000 Western Beech Timber) 5th ($18,000 Blackwood Timber) 4th ($20,000 Golden Sassafras Timber) 3rd ($22,000 Celery Top Pine Timber)
Private Timber Reserve is land that has been declared as a Private Timber Reserve under Section 11 of the Forests Practices Act 1985. [11] The Act was passed by both Houses of the Tasmanian Government in 1985, and received Royal Assent 25 May 1985, with a commencement date of 2 November 1987 for Part II – Private Timber Reserves.
Australian blackwood (Diospyros longibracteata), from Laos; Australian or Tasmanian, Paluma blackwood (Acacia melanoxylon), a tree of eastern Australia; Bombay, Malabar, Nilghiri or (East) Indian blackwood (Dalbergia latifolia), a timber tree of India; Burmese Blackwood (Dalbergia cultrata, Dalbergia oliveri), trees from South China, Southeast Asia
Imperial Governments 1842 Act - enabled the Van Diemen's Land Governor was able to grant "Licences for the felling, removal and sale of timber from such lands" [4] Waste Land Act (1863) - made it possible for further licensing for forest activities was possible after Van Diemen's Land become Tasmania in 1856.
Tasmanian oak [1] is a native Australian hardwood produced by any of three trees, Eucalyptus regnans, Eucalyptus obliqua or Eucalyptus delegatensis, when it is sourced from the Australian state of Tasmania. [2] Despite the common name "oak", none of the species are in the genus Quercus or the oak family Fagaceae.
Sustainable Timber Tasmania, formerly Forestry Tasmania, is a government business enterprise owned by the Government of Tasmania, Australia. It is responsible for the management of public production forest in Tasmania , which is about 800,000 hectares of crown land (public land) that is classified as 'permanent timber production zone'.
This is the simplest rainforest community in Tasmania; it is typically represented by medium to tall forests dominated by Nothofagus cunninghamii and/or Atherosperma moschatum, often together with Leptospermum lanigerum (woolly tea-tree) or Acacia melanoxylon (Australian blackwood). [10] Typically, these forests are at least 40 m (130 ft) in ...