RING POROUS OAK
(the live oaks, from both the red and white groups, are diffuse porous and are with the domestic diffuse porous species)
NOTE: unless otherwise specifically stated, all of the images shown on this
page are of 1/4" square end grain cross sections shown at 12X with the top
of the image towards the bark and the bottom towards the pith so that
earlywood is towards the bottom of the growth rings and latewood is towards the top
to see all species with links to their anatomy page go here:
species links
general characteristics of oak end grain: strong rays combined with the classic ring porous look make oak one of the easiest woods to identify
pores: exceptionally strong line of large earlywood pores up to 4 pores thick dropping off immediately to much smaller pores throughout the latewood. Even within any particular species the number of pores in the earlywood rows can vary from 1 to 4 depending on growing conditions
red oak group (other than live oaks): the latewood pores are usually countable/distinguishable (at least in the early part of the latewood) with a 10X loupe. The pores never contain tyloses
white oak group (other than live oaks): the latewood pores are numerous and tend to be too small to distinguish. The pores always contain tyloses (although it might not show up in any given pore at the point of a particular cross section cut
live oak group: are all diffuse porous and are on that page, not here, even though the live oaks come from both the red and white groups (and do or do not contain tyloses accordingly)
The latewood pores in all oaks are often surrounded by lighter tissue that together make up dendritic bands, usually widening as they move through the latewood. There is a slight tendency for this to happen in white oak more than in red oaks but you cannot count on that as an identifying feature
parenchyma: tiny bands of diffuse in aggregate parenchyma between rays, sometimes not clearly visible even with a 10X loupe . On this page I count over 20 samples that clearly have them and 4 or 5 that are either not so clear or not clear at all
rays: often of variable size (sometimes a large variation) but always with some very strong and visible to the naked eye. Sometimes there are also tiny rays that are barely visible even with a 10X loupe
growth rings: red and white groups, other than the live oaks, are classic ring porous, obvious to the naked eye --- if I had to pick just one wood that most typifies the classic ring porous look, red oak would be it.
One reliable, but sometimes quite difficult (at the level of shop work and a 10X loupe), way to tell red oak and white oak apart is by the fact that most pores in white oak show tyloses and those in red oak seldom do. Tyloses is a shiny substance and the pores that are clogged with it look a bit like tiny little round windows that have been smashed up and glued back together with the pieces crooked. It is difficult on my own white oak samples below to tell that there is tyloses (even though there is) because I fine-sand my samples rather than using razor cuts and the images are not as clear at that level of detail as I would like. SO ... to clearly show what the tyloses looks like in white oak, I found a couple of pics on the Internet and use them here to show what the tyloses looks like and the difference between that and red oak which has no tyloses (the clogging in some of the red oak pores in both the pic here and the ones below in my own red oak samples is rarely tyloses). My best guess is that all of these pics are shown at about 20X
the live oaks, from both the red and white groups, are diffuse porous and are with the domestic diffuse porous species
STILL NEEDED ON THIS PAGE: comments on each species
RED OAK GROUP
black oak / Quercus velutina
black oak / Quercus velutina
black oak / Quercus velutina
black oak / Quercus velutina
black oak / Quercus velutina
black oak / Quercus velutina
black oak / Quercus velutina
blackjack oak / Quercus marilandica
blackjack oak / Quercus marilandica
blackjack oak / Quercus marilandica
blackjack oak / Quercus marilandica
blackjack oak / Quercus marilandica
blackjack oak / Quercus marilandica
blackjack oak / Quercus marilandica
black oak / Quercus spp.
California black oak / Quercus kelloggii
water oak / Quercus nigra
water oak / Quercus nigra
water oak / Quercus nigra
water oak / Quercus nigra
water oak / Quercus nigra
water oak / Quercus nigra
bluejack oak / Quercus incana
laurel oak / Quercus laurifolia
laurel oak / Quercus laurifolia --- 1/3" x 5/8" cross section shown here at about 5X
laurel oak / Quercus laurifolia
laurel oak / Quercus hemisphaerica
laurel oak / Quercus hemisphaerica --- a 1/4" x 5/12" cross section shown here at 7X
laurel oak / Quercus hemisphaerica --- a 1/4" x 1/3" cross section shown here at 9X and still not a complete growth ring
laurel oak / Quercus hemisphaerica --- a 1/4" x 1/3" cross section shown here at 9X and still not a complete growth ring
Darlington laurel oak / Quercus hemisphaerica --- sample is 1/4" x 1/3" shown here at 9X; this was as much as I could get from this sample and it does not have even one full growth ring
laurel oak / Quercus hemisphaerica --- 1/4" x 5/12" shown here at 7X
shingle oak / Quercus imbricaria
shingle oak / Quercus imbricaria
shingle oak / Quercus imbricaria
shingle oak / Quercus imbricaria
shingle oak / Quercus imbricaria --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
shingle oak / Quercus imbricaria --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
Southern red oak / Quercus falcata
Southern red oak / Quercus falcata
Southern red oak / Quercus falcata
Southern red oak / Quercus falcata
Southern red oak / Quercus falcata --- a 1/4" x 1/2" cross section shown here at 6X
cherrybark oak / Quercus falcata
scarlet oak / Quercus coccinea
scarlet oak / Quercus coccinea
scarlet oak / Quercus coccinea
scarlet oak / Quercus coccinea
Northern red oak / Quercus rubra
Northern red oak / Quercus rubra --- a 1/4" x 5/12" cross section shown here at 7X
Northern red oak / Quercus rubra
red oak / Quercus rubra
red oak / Quercus rubra
red oak / Quercus rubra --- from a crotch piece
red oak / Quercus rubra --- from a crotch piece showing particularly strongly the squashing effect on the rays due to the compression
Texas red oak / Quercus buckeyli
Nuttal's oak / Quercus texana
Nuttal's oak / Quercus texana
chestnut leaf oak / Quercus castaneifolia
chestnut leaf oak / Quercus castaneifolia
chestnut leaf oak / Quercus castaneifolia
chestnut leaf oak / Quercus castaneifolia --- image is out of focus
pin oak / Quercus palustris
pin oak / Quercus palustris
pin oak / Quercus palustris
pin oak / Quercus palustris
pin oak / Quercus spp.
pin oak / Quercus palustris --- showing sanding scratches
pin oak / Quercus palustris --- a 1/4" x 1/2" cross section shown here at 6X
willow oak / Quercus palustris
Shumard oak / Quercus shumardii
Shumard oak / Quercus shumardii
peach oak / Quercus phellos
willow oak / Quercus phellos --- very poor job of sanding the end grain
willow oak / Quercus phellos
turkey oak / Quercus laevis
barren oak / Quercus spp.
encino blanco / Quercus xalapensis
encino blanco / Quercus xalapensis
encino blanco / Quercus xalapensis
loquat leaf oak / Quercus rysophylla
loquat leaf oak / Quercus rysophylla
Emory oak / Quercus emoryi
bear oak / Quercus ilicifolia
bear oak / Quercus ilicifolia
red oak / Quercus spp.
red oak / Quercus spp.
red oak / Quercus spp.
red oak / Quercus spp.
red oak / Quercus spp.
red oak / Quercus spp.
red oak / Quercus spp.
red oak / Quercus spp.
WHITE OAK GROUP
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
white oak / Quercus alba
old growth white oak / Quercus alba --- This piece is not representative of the species but I included it as an interesting look at a particular kind of ring porous wood, namely very high ring count wood. This tree grew so slowly that the tiny amount of late growth at the end of each year is swamped by the large pore of the single ring of pores in the next year's early growth so you see almost nothing but a mass of pores. Because of the very high density of pores, this piece is remarkably light for oak
white oak / Quercus alba
Arizona white oak / Quercus arizonica
Arizona white oak / Quercus arizonica --- this piece looks much more like a live oak than the other Quercus arizonica sample to the left
Chapman oak / Quercus chapmanii
post oak / Quercus stellata
post oak / Quercus stellata
post oak / Quercus stellata
swamp white oak / Quercus bicolor --- a 1/2" x 1/4" cross section show here at 6X
swamp white oak / Quercus bicolor
swamp white oak / Quercus bicolor --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
swamp white oak / Quercus bicolor --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
blue oak / Quercus douglasii
blue oak / Quercus douglasii
overcup oak / Quercus lyrata
overcup oak / Quercus lyrata
overcup oak / Quercus lyrata
burr oak / Quercus macrocarpa --- these two are from nearby areas of the same piece
burr oak / Quercus macrocarpa --- these two are from nearby areas of the same piece
burr oak / Quercus macrocarpa
burr oak / Quercus macrocarpa
burr oak / Quercus macrocarpa
burr oak / Quercus macrocarpa
burr oak / Quercus macrocarpa
chinkapin oak / Quercus muehlenbergii
chinkapin oak / Quercus muehlenbergii --- these two are from nearby areas of the same piece
chinkapin oak / Quercus muehlenbergii --- these two are from nearby areas of the same piece
chinkapin oak / Quercus muehlenbergii
chinkapin oak (crotch piece) / Quercus muehlenbergii
chinkapin oak (crotch piece) / Quercus muehlenbergii --- a 1/4" x 1/3" cross section shown here at 9X
English oak / Quercus robur
valley oak / Quercus lobata --- note that although this also uses the common names "live oak" and "California live oak", it is deciduous and ring porous so for ID purposes it does not have the characteristics of a live oak.
English brown oak / Quercus spp.
English brown oak / Quercus spp.
English brown oak / Quercus spp. --- this is from a very old piece of flooring and might be bog oak
English brown oak / Quercus spp. --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
English brown oak / Quercus spp. --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
chestnut oak / Quercus prinus
chestnut oak / Quercus montana
Gambel oak / Quercus gambelii --- an area near the pith
Gambel oak / Quercus gambelii --- an area of the same sample but farther out where the growth has slowed down considerably
swamp chestnut oak / Quercus michauxii
swamp chestnut oak / Quercus michauxii
swamp chestnut oak / Quercus michauxii
swamp chestnut oak / Quercus michauxii
swamp chestnut oak / Quercus michauxii --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
swamp chestnut oak / Quercus michauxii --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
Oregon white oak / Quercus garryana
Oregon white oak / Quercus garryana
Oregon oak / Quercus garryana
white oak / Quercus spp. --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
white oak / Quercus spp. --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
Mongolian oak / Quercus mongolica
white oak / Quercus spp.
white oak / Quercus spp.
white oak / Quercus spp.
white oak / Quercus spp.
white oak / Quercus spp. --- this is old growth white oak and the growth is so slow that each growth ring is just a single line of earlywood pores and then a narrow band of dendritic parenchyma that is so squashed that it's just a blob. Because of the very high density of pores, this piece is remarkably light for oak.
white oak / Quercus spp.
white oak / Quercus spp. --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
white oak / Quercus spp. --- these two are from nearby areas of the same sample
GROUP UNKNOWN
(I don't know which group, red or white, these belong in)
bog oak / Quercus spp. --- recovered from a swamp in Ohio
bog oak / Quercus spp. --- this piece has about 24 rings/inch which means it was probably old growth forest when it went into the bog.
yellow oak / Quercus spp.
caucasian oak / Quercus macranthera
caucasian oak / Quercus macranthera
swamp oak / Quercus spp. --- there are so many oaks that use the name swamp oak that I have no idea whether this is a red oak or a white oak but I THINK that the pores have tyloses which would mean that this is a white oak.