enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of woods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_woods

    Spruce (Picea) Norway spruce (Picea abies) Black spruce (Picea mariana) Red spruce (Picea rubens) Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) White spruce (Picea glauca) Sugi (Cryptomeria japonica) White cedar Northern white cedar (Thuja occidentalis) Atlantic white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides) Nootka cypress (Cupressus nootkatensis)

  3. Spruce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spruce

    Spruce is the standard material used in soundboards for many musical instruments, including guitars, mandolins, cellos, violins, and the soundboard at the heart of a piano and the harp. Wood used for this purpose is referred to as tonewood. Spruce, along with cedar, is often used for the soundboard/top of an acoustic guitar. The main types of ...

  4. Silviculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silviculture

    After two growing seasons, white spruce under long days in Florida were about the same as those in Wisconsin, but twice as tall as plants under natural Wisconsin photoperiods. Under natural days in Florida, with the short local photoperiod, white spruce was severely dwarfed and had a low rate of survival.

  5. Birch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch

    The Hughes H-4 Hercules was made mostly of birch wood, despite its better-known moniker, "The Spruce Goose". Birch plywood was specified by the BBC as the only wood that can be used in making the cabinets of the long-lived LS3/5A loudspeaker. [14] Birch is used as firewood because of its high calorific value per unit weight and unit volume. It ...

  6. Ecological regions of Quebec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_regions_of_Quebec

    The tree line, beyond which black spruce, white spruce and tamarack no longer grow, is the boundary between the boreal zone and the Arctic zone. The Low Arctic sub-zone, the only Arctic sub-zone in Quebec, has no trees, continuous permafrost and tundra vegetation. This includes shrubs, herbaceous plants, typically graminoids, mosses and lichens ...

  7. Picea engelmannii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picea_engelmannii

    Picea engelmannii is a medium-sized to large evergreen tree growing to 25–40 metres (82–131 feet) tall, exceptionally to 65 m (213 ft) tall, and with a trunk diameter of up to 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in). The reddish bark is thin and scaly, [ 6 ] flaking off in small circular plates 5–10 centimetres (2–4 in) across.

  8. Muskeg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muskeg

    Poplar growing on muskeg. Muskeg (Ojibwe: mashkiig; Cree: maskīk; French: fondrière de mousse, lit. moss bog) is a peat-forming ecosystem found in several northern climates, most commonly in Arctic and boreal areas. Muskeg is approximately synonymous with bog or peatland, and is a standard term in Canada and Alaska.

  9. Picea meyeri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picea_meyeri

    Picea meyeri (Meyer's spruce; Chinese: 白杄; pinyin: báiqiān) is a species of spruce native to Nei Mongol in the northeast to Gansu in the southwest and also inhabiting Shanxi, Hebei and Shaanxi. It is a medium-sized evergreen tree growing to 30 m tall, and with a trunk diameter of up to 0.8 m. The shoots are yellowish-brown, glabrous or ...