jack pine, 17.1 BTUs per cord
"Pulp wood" is the wood used for pulping. "Wood pulp" is pulp made from wood.
That depends on the type of wood and the size of the logs. A Stere of oak can weigh twice what a stere of pine does
Wood pulp-which produces paper-comes from softwood trees such as spruce, pine, fir, larch, and hemlock trees. Wood pulp also comes from hardwoods such as eucalyptus, aspen, and birch trees.
Rayon is a regenerated cellulose that is made up of wood pulp. It commonly is made from trees such as Spruce, Pine, Beech, and Eucalyptus.
That depends on the type of wood. Oak for instance, weighs more then pine.
Soft wood...
Wood pulp is put in shredded cheese so that the cheese will not clump up. Wood pulp is made from wood and other plant matter.
A cord is defined as 128 cubic feet (3.62 m3), corresponding to a woodpile 4 feet (122 cm) wide, 4 feet (1.2 m) high and 8 feet (244 cm) long. So the weight would depend on the type of wood. Cherry or apple would weigh several times what balsa would. Also, the pieces of wood are irregular in shape so you would not be able to weigh a "cord" of wood with precision. That is why "cord" is a term of measure not weight, just like inch, foot, yard, mile, square ft., etc. ----- A cord of wood, dried and stacked well, will vary in weight from about 2000 to 4000 pounds. Clearly, softwoods, such as pine, will weigh on the lighter side and hardwoods on the heavier. If the wood is not dried, it is likely to weigh from 3000 to 5500 pounds, but different woods contain different amounts of water, so it is a little harder to predict without knowing the specifics. There is a good web page with information about this, run by the University of Nebraska, at the link below. It provides a good deal of information, including weight of a cord, by species, dried and not.
Mainly for timber, the most common of these is the Pine, which is used extensively in agro-forestry. Products include: wood, bark products, paper pulp (for cardboard, paper etc.)
Yes, pine is a type of wood. It is mainly called pine wood.
Lignin (brown in color) causes color of wood pulp.