Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.
...displacing the traditional wool and cotton. It can be easily maintained, and its soft visual and tactile texture, as well as its sound-absorbing qualities, make it attractive for residential use. Hardwoods—primarily oak, birch, and maple—are also used for floors, both in the traditional narrow planks nailed to plywood decks and as prefabricated parquet elements, which are applied...
...other woody plants are of two categories: gymnosperms and angiosperms. Gymnosperms, or cone-bearing trees, produce softwoods, such as pine and spruce, and angiosperms produce temperate and tropical hardwoods, such as oak, beech, teak, and balsa. Softwoods account for about 40 percent and hardwoods about 60 percent of the world’s production of lumber. It should be noted that the distinction...
Finally, a more highly evolved group of forest trees is the dicots, or broad-leaved trees, also called hardwoods. Their wood structure is complex, and each sort of broad-leaved lumber has characteristic properties that fit it for particular uses.
Trees have been grouped in various ways, some of which more or less parallel their scientific classification: softwoods are conifers, and hardwoods are dicotyledons. Hardwoods are also known as broadleaf trees. The designations softwood, hardwood, and broadleaf, however, are often imprecise. The wood of some hardwoods—for example, certain willows and...
Temperate-softwoods-and-hardwoods-selected-to-highlight-natural-variations-inTemperate softwoods (left column) and hardwoods (right column), selected to highlight natural …[Credits : USDA Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory]
Six-tropical-hardwoods-selected-to-emphasize-the-range-of-naturalSix tropical hardwoods, selected to emphasize the range of natural variation in colour and figure: …[Credits : USDA Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory]
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