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Use

Decorative wood, furniture making, parquet flooring, woodturning, instrument making.

Origin

Amazon, Central America

Properties

Hard, weatherproof

Certification

Cites 2

Goncalvo Alves / Tigerwood / Muiracatiara / Jobillo

Names and distribution:

Botanically, Goncalo alvez belongs to the genus Astronium within the Anacardiaceae family. Woods of the species Astronium lecointei, A. graveolens, A. fraxinifolium are traded. In Germany, the ATIBT’s common name is Goncalo-Alvez, and in English-speaking countries the term “Tigerwood” is also used. The distribution includes the Amazon region (Muiracatiara) and Central America (where A. graveolens, “Jobillo” is found). Only occasionally found in wet forests. A valued wood species in the countries of origin.

Wooden picture:

Light sapwood, set off, heartwood of light brown to reddish brown basic color with dark, distinctive stripes of varying width and height, which give the wood its characteristic character. The grain is straight, pores and texture are fine. Rarely occurring twisted growth. An optimum appearance is achieved with radially cut wood, i.e. with vertical growth rings. Very decorative overall.

Properties:

Heavy wood with a gross density at 12% moisture content of 0.8 – 0.85 t/m³. The total tangential shrinkage is specified as 7.3% and the radial shrinkage as 4.1%. The modulus of elasticity at 12% wood moisture is 17,100 N/mm². The wood is hard and rigid. Drying must be slow to avoid warping. With thicker cross-sections, there is a risk of cracking during drying. Goncalo-Alves is easy to machine; pre-drilling is required. The natural resistance is good to very good.

Use:
Decorative wood, furniture making, parquet flooring, woodturning, instrument making.
Sources:
ATIBT (1990): Atlas de Maderas Tropicales de América Latina
GOTTWALD (1970): Wood identification of the most important commercial woods
IBAMA (2002): Madeiras Tropicais Brasileiras

Note: according to the latest findings, but excluding any liability

Figure 1: Pattern of heartwood sections
Figure 2: Detail