EFFECT OF AGE. 17 



Logs froiii t1io to]) fan usually be recognized by the larger percentage of sapwood and the 

 smaller pro))i)rtion and more legular outlines of the bands of suninierwood, which are more or less 

 wavy in the butt logs. 



Both weight and strength vary in the different 

 parts of the same cross sectiou from center to periph- 

 ery, and though the variatious appear frequently 

 irregular in single individuals, a definite law of rela- 

 tion is 7ieverthelessdisceiniblein large averages, and 

 once determined is readily observable in every tree. 



A separate inquiiy, avoiding the many variables 

 which enter into the mechanical tests, permits the fol- 

 lowing deductions for the wood of tliese pines, and 

 especially for Longleaf; the data referring to weight, 

 but by inference also to strength: 



1. The variation is greatest iu the butt log (the 

 heaviest part) and least iu the top logs. 



2. The variation in weight, he^lce also in strength, 

 from center to jieripheiy depends on the rate of 

 growth, the heavier, stronger wood being formed dur- 

 ing the period of most ra|)id growth, lighter and 

 weaker wood in old age. 



3. Aberrations from the normal growth, due to 

 unusual seasons and other disturbing causes, cloud 

 the uniformity of the law of variation, thus occasion- 

 ally leading to the foiniation of heavier, broad-ringed 

 wood in old, and lighter narrow-ringed wood in young 

 trees. 



4. Slow-growing trees (with narrow rings) do not 

 make less- heavy, nor heavier wood than thriftily 

 grown trees (with wide rings) of the same age. (See 

 fig. 2.) 



EFFECT OF ACiE. 



The interior of the butt log, representing the 

 young sapling of less than fifteen or twenty years of 

 age, and the central portion of all logs containing 

 the pith and two to five rings adjoining, is always 

 light and weak. 



The heaviest wood iu Longleaf and Cuban Pine is 

 formed between the ages of fifteen and one hundred 

 and twenty years, with a specific weight of over (t.OO 

 and a maximum of 0.66 to_0.68, between the ages of 

 forty and sixty years. The wood formed at the age 

 of about one hundred years will have a specific 

 weight of 0.02 to O.fJ'J, which is also the average 

 weight for the entire wood of old trees; the wood 

 formed alter this age is lighter but does not fall below 

 0.r)0 up to the two hundredth year: the strength 

 varies in the same ratio. 



In the shorter-lived Loblolly and Shortleaf the 

 period for the formation of t' e heaviest wood is 

 between the ages of fifteen and eighty, the average weight then being over 0.50, with a maximum 

 of 0.57 at the age of thirty to forty. The average weight for old trees (0.51 to 0.52) lies about the 

 seventy-fifth year, the weight then falling off" to about 0.45 at the age of one hundred and forty, 

 and continuing to decrease to below 0.3S, as the trees grow older. 

 25006— No. 13—02 2 



'■ W/!/ZOA/rAi ^///^///V. 

 i. 2 — Schematic section through stem of Longltaf I' 

 luivviiig variation of specific weight with height, diame 

 lul age at twenty (aio), sixty (dcd), one hundred and twe 

 nee), and two hundred (fj'fS) years. 



