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timber

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timber

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The mill pictured is at Fideris, in Switzerland. Timber is processed for commercial use either by pulping in readiness for making into paper or by sawing into planks of varying length and thickness for building and furniture making. Bark that is stripped off and not pulped may be recycled as garden mulch.
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Wooden structures usually need to be jointed at the corners. Frame joints are used in assembling structures and box joints are used where the pieces of timber are wide.
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Types of hard and soft woods and also manufactured boards, such as chipboard and MDF. Hardwoods come from broadleaf trees and softwoods from evergreens.
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Stocks of tropical hardwood planks in a timber yard, awaiting shipment for use in furniture or building.

Wood used in construction, furniture, and paper pulp. Hardwoods include tropical mahogany, teak, ebony, rosewood, temperate oak, elm, beech, and eucalyptus. All except eucalyptus are slow-growing, and world supplies are almost exhausted. Softwoods comprise the conifers (pine, fir, spruce, and larch), which are quick to grow and easy to work but inferior in quality of grain. White woods include ash, birch, and sycamore; all have light-coloured timber, are fast-growing, and can be used as veneers on cheaper timber.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
The difficulty now was to find timber of sufficient size for the construction of canoes, the trees in these high mountain regions being chiefly a scrubbed growth of pines and cedars, aspens, haws, and service-berries, and a small kind of cotton-tree, with a leaf resembling that of the willow.
The idea as to how I might learn to write was suggested to me by being in Durgin and Bailey's ship-yard, and frequently seeing the ship carpenters, after hewing, and getting a piece of timber ready for use, write on the timber the name of that part of the ship for which it was intended.
Such dispositions, are the very errors of human nature; and yet they are the fittest timber, to make great politics of; like to knee timber, that is good for ships, that are ordained to be tossed; but not for building houses, that shall stand firm.
 
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