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Luigi Zanasi
 
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On Wed, 6 Oct 2004 13:24:44 +0200, "P van Rijckevorsel"
scribbled:

Q: A wood with "cedar" in the name will surely be a softwood. Right?
A: False: "cedar" is a word that does not mean anything except a wood with a
certain type of fragrance (if that). Going only by frequency, "cedar" in the
US most often will be "Western Redcedar" (Thuja plicata), followed at some
distance by "Eastern Redcedar" (Juniperus virginiana) also marketed as
"Aromatic Cedar" [these are both softwoods]. A "cedar" from Central America
will usually be a Cedrela species; from SE Asia usually a Toona species
[these are both hardwoods]. Etc, etc[list goes on at considerable length].


In Northeastern North America, White cedar (Thuja occidentalis) is
probably more common than Eastern red cedar.

Luigi
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