identification of wood in gunstocks
Quote from: scooter on March 18, 2010, 10:47:45 PM
To determine if American or European, you can send a piece of wood, about 2 X size of a toothpick to Wood ID Group /US Forest Service/ Gifford Pinchot Dr/ University of Wisconsin, Madison [don't know the zip]. You can send a reasonable number of samples per year, maybe 10, no charge [your tax $$$ at work]. All I ever ask for is what kind of wood & North American or European. I'm with those who believe ultimately it will be shown to be European. That said, many early guns are product of European craftsmen who came over & have not done a la St Paul "when in Rome" etc.
The Center for Wood Anatomy Research will try to identify what species of wood was used in the making of a gunstock. From what I know they cannot determine where it was grown. If the gunstock is made of English walnut (Juglans regia), that does not mean it was made in Europe. The colonists brought all sorts of trees and seeds with them during the earliest attempts to colonize America. If anyone has tried to shell the nuts of the native walnuts, black (Juglans nigra) or butternut (Juglans cinerea), you know they would have tried to start growing English walnuts almost immediately. By 1700 there could have been plenty of English walnut wood available in the colonies for gunstocks. Under the right conditions walnut trees can grow rapidly. The date of introduction for English walnut to America is unknown but it is thought to be at least by the mid-1600's.
M. Keen