johnnyb
Established Member
my understanding of that is old growth timber was exhausted a long time ago in Europe ( less so in america)
I've certainly seen oak sills on sashes not rot like softwood but break down and weather away.
pinus strobus heartwood is genetically identical to heartwood 150 years ago. what's changed?
I think its wrong to imagine resources weren't farmed and exploited back then. France famously planting oaks for shipbuilding(Britain had timber from the colonies)
the reason sheffield steel used iron from Sweden was because Sweden still had timber for charcoal(and quality ore) the only way to get steel with few impurities was to use charcoal. uk had used its own supply many years ago. hence why Abraham darby's discovery helped reignite the iron industry(albeit for non tools being to full of impurities)
I've certainly seen oak sills on sashes not rot like softwood but break down and weather away.
pinus strobus heartwood is genetically identical to heartwood 150 years ago. what's changed?
I think its wrong to imagine resources weren't farmed and exploited back then. France famously planting oaks for shipbuilding(Britain had timber from the colonies)
the reason sheffield steel used iron from Sweden was because Sweden still had timber for charcoal(and quality ore) the only way to get steel with few impurities was to use charcoal. uk had used its own supply many years ago. hence why Abraham darby's discovery helped reignite the iron industry(albeit for non tools being to full of impurities)