• Introduction
  • Softwoods
    • Eastern Red Cedar
    • Eastern White Pine
    • Bald Cypress
    • Eastern Hemlock
    • Spruce
  • Hardwoods
    • Ring Porous Hardwoods
      • Chestnut
      • Elm
      • Fox Grape
      • Hickory
      • Hackberry
      • Black Locust
      • The Oaks
      • American Ash
      • Hercules Club
      • Mulberry
      • Paw Paw
      • Redbud
      • Sassafras
      • Sumacs
      • Trumpet Vine
    • Diffuse Porous Hardwoods
      • American Beech
      • Cherry
      • Cottonwood
      • Holly
      • Maple
      • Red Gum
      • Tulip Poplar
      • Black Willow
      • Sycamore
      • Birch
    • Semi-ring Porous Hardwoods
      • Black Walnut
      • Common Persimmon
  • Key to Softwoods
  • Key to Hardwoods
  • JPPM Home


Wood and Charcoal
Identification

Introduction

Creating a Southern  Maryland Type Collection

Wood and Charcoal Anatomy Basics

Key to Softwoods

Key to Hardwoods

Softwoods

Eastern Red Cedar

Eastern White Pine

Bald Cypress

Eastern Hemlock

Spruce

Hardwoods -
Ring Porous Hardwoods

Chestnut

Elm

Fox Grape

Hickory

Hackberry

Black Locust

The Oaks

American Ash

Hercules Club

Mulberry

Pawpaw

Redbud

Sassafras

Sumacs

Trumpet Vine


Diffuse Porous Hardwoods

American Beech

Cherry

Cottonwood

Holly

Maple

Red Gum

Tulip Poplar

Black Willow

Sycamore

Birch


Semi-ring Porous Hardwoods

Black Walnut

Common Persimmon

    Wood & Charcoal Identification in Southern Maryland
    By Harry Alden

The Oaks

The Oaks (Quercus spp./Fagaceae) are made up of 275 to 500 species that can be split into three groups based on their cellular structure; the Live Oak Group, the Red Oak Group and the White Oak Group. Species within each group look alike at the cellular level. Oak trees can attain heights of 125 ft with large, sometimes irregular diameters. Oak sapwood white to very light brown and the heartwood is dark brown in the white oak group and red brown in the red oak group. The wood of Oak has a rough texture and is heavy, hard, stiff and strong with good working properties. The oaks vary with respect to decay resistance from nonresistant to very resistant. Oak is used for barrels, kegs and casks (white oak group), boxes, caskets, containers, fuel wood, furniture, hardwood dimensions and flooring, mining timbers, pallets, paneling, plywood, railroad crossties, ships, tannin dyes, timber bridges, truck and trailer beds, and veneer.

http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/documnts/TechSheets/HardwoodNA/pdf_files/quercusmet.pdf.

Characteristics found in the Oak (Quercus spp.)

  • Ring Porous
  • Dendritic latewood
  • Simple perforations
  • I/V pits medium (8-12)
  • Rays of two types [Wide rays – can be seen with the naked eye & uniseriate rays]
  • Rays homocellular
  Tangential section of White Oak   Group (Quercus sp.) showing   numerous, small uniseriate rays
  and one wide ray (center).

Three species groups:

  • Live oak group semi-ring porous to diffuse porous
  • Red Oak Group (Erythrobalanus) ring porous
  • White oak group (Leucobalanus) ring porous.

Separation of Red/White Oaks

Feature

White Oak Group
(Leucobalanus)

Red Oak Group
(Erythrobalanus)
Combined Accuracy
(estimated)
Tyloses in Heartwood
Yes Sometimes ~50%
Ray Height
> 1 1/4" < 1" 95%
Latewood Vessels
Numerous & Indistinct Few & Distinct 99%
Latewood Vessel
Cross-section
Thin Walled & Angular Thick Walled & Round 100%

Red Oak

Cross-section of Red Oak Group Quercus sp.), showing earlywood vessels and latewood   vessels.

White Oak

Cross-section of White Oak Group(Quercus sp.) showing a wide ray, earlywood vessels, latewood vessels and the growth ring boundary. Note tyloses in earlywood vessels.

CHARCOAL SLIDES

Red Oak

White Oak

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Maryland Archaeological Conservation Lab
Updated: 4/30/17

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