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MAHOGANY , a dark-coloured See also: wood largely used for See also: household furniture, the product of a large See also: tree indigenous to Central See also: America and the West Indies
.
It was originally received from See also: Jamaica; 521,300 ft. were exported from that See also: island in 1753
.
It is known botanically as Swietenia Mahogani, and is a member of the See also: order Meliaceae
.
It bears compound leaves, resembling those of the ash, and clusters of small See also: flowers, with five sepals and petals and ten stamens which are See also: united into a See also: tube
.
The fruit is a See also: pear-shaped woody capsule, and contains many winged seeds
.
The dark-coloured bark has been considered a febrifuge, and the seeds were used by the See also: ancient Aztecs with oil for a cosmetic, but the most valuable product is the See also: timber, first noticed by the See also: carpenter on See also: board See also: Sir Walter Raleigh's See also: ship in 1595 for its See also: great beauty, hardness and durability
.
Dr Gibbons brought it into See also: notice as well adapted for furniture in the early See also: part of the 18th century, and its use as a See also: cabinet wood was first practically established by a cabinet-maker named Wollaston, who was employed by Gibbons to See also: work up some mahogany brought to See also: England by his See also: brother
.
It was introduced into See also: India in 1795, and is now cultivated in See also: Bengal and as far See also: north as Saharunpur
.
' The timber of See also: species of Cedrela and Melia, other members of the order Meliaceae, are used as Mahogany, and the product of the West See also: African Khaya senegalensis is known as African mahogany
.
There is some confusion between the product of these various trees
.
See also: Herbert See also: Stone (The Timbers of Commerce, 1904) says: " The various species of mahogany and
See also: cedar are so confusing that it is difficult to make precise statements as to their structure or origin
.
I know of no convincing proof that any of the See also: American kinds met with on the See also: English market are the wood of Swietenia Mahogani, nor that those shipped from See also: Africa are the wood of Khaya senegalensis
.
These two genera are very nearly allied to Cedrela and Melia, and it is difficult to See also: separate any of the four from the rest by the characters of the wood
.
After giving the most careful See also: attention to every detail, I lean to the view that most if not all of the mahoganies commonly met with are Cedrelas."
Kiggelaria Dregeana (natural order Bixineae), a native of See also: South Africa, is known as See also: Natal mahogany
.
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