Abstract
ON carefully examining the clean-cut end of a sawn log of timber, it is easy to convince ourselves of the existence of certain marks upon it. which have reference to its structure. These marks will vary in intensity and number according to the kind of tree, the age at which it is felled, and some other circumstances, which may be overlooked for the present; but in a given case it would be possible to observe some such marks as those indicated in Fig. I. In the specimen chosen there is a nearly central spot, the pith, around which numerous concentric lines—the “annual rings”—run. Radiating from the pith towards the periphery are cracks, the number, and length, and breadth of which may vary according to the time the log has been exposed to the weather, and other circumstances; these cracks are due to the contraction of the wood as it “shrinks,” and they coincide with medullary rays, as lines of weakness. Between these cracks are to be seen numerous very fine radiating lines indicating the course of the uninjured medullary rays, which again will vary in distinctness, &c., according to the species of timber.
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WARD, H. Timber, and Some of its Diseases . Nature 37, 182–186 (1887). https://doi.org/10.1038/037182a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/037182a0