Lime wood is considered a hardwood. It is known for its fine texture and is commonly used in carving due to its softness and workability.
Hardwood trees have broad leaves and are angiosperms, while softwood trees have needle-like or scale-like leaves and are gymnosperms. Hardwood trees are typically deciduous, shedding their leaves annually, while softwood trees are usually evergreen, keeping their foliage year-round. Additionally, hardwood trees are generally denser and slower growing compared to softwood trees.
Tamarack, otherwise known as larch, is a softwood. Softwood species are normally evergreen trees with needles and cones, conifers. Tamarack is a conifer but it is deciduous, loses its needles each fall like a hardwood.
The terms coniferous and deciduous refer to trees, rather than particular kinds of forests. Forests described as coniferous or deciduous are those containing primarily those kinds of trees. Coniferous trees are trees which don't change over the seasons, like evergreens and other pine trees.
The black spruce is considered a softwood tree because it has needle-like leaves and produces cones. Softwoods come from gymnosperm trees, while hardwoods come from angiosperm trees.
Lime wood is considered a hardwood. It is known for its fine texture and is commonly used in carving due to its softness and workability.
Hardwood
NO
A leaf is neither. A cherry tree is a hardwood.
To my knowledge, any deciduous tree ( A tree that loses it's leaves in the winter) is considered a hardwood. Even the Tulip Poplar tree that is most often mistaken for a softwood, is a hardwood tree.
Wikipedia lists palmwood as a hardwood.
No, it's a hardwood.
I believe that a sassafras tree is a hardwood
Aspen , being a deciduous tree, provides a hardwood.
Hardwood comes from trees with wide leaves, while softwood comes from conifers like cypress and pines. The chestnut tree is a hardwood tree.
Its a soft hardwood its like elm but harder to work
It doesn't really matter softwood makes soft paper and hardwood makes normal paper