<skos:prefLabel xml:lang="en">American tulipwood (wood)</skos:prefLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">tulipwood, American (wood)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">tulip poplar (wood)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">yellow poplar (wood)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">canary whitewood (wood)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">white wood (American tulipwood, wood)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">whitewood (American tulipwood, wood)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">Virginia poplar (wood)</skos:altLabel>
- <skos:broader rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//concepts/48819" />
<skos:note xml:lang="en">Soft, fine-grained wood of the species Liriodendron tulipifera of North America. The sapwood is usually a creamy off-white color; heartwood is pale green, often with streaks of red, purple, or black. It is cheap, easy-to-work, can take a sharp edge, and is stable, used to seal pipes and valves in organs, for siding clapboards, coffin boxes, pattern timber, and wooden ware.</skos:note>
<skos:notation>300375375</skos:notation>
- <skos:inScheme rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//schemas/2" />