1200 board feet
Based on my research there is no scientific name for Philippine Mahogany. Generally, Mahoganies belong to the family Meliaceae.
Cubic board feet is not a term used in the lumber industry, but it's obvious that a cubic foot is a cube that is one foot on an edge. A board foot, which is a common term used in the lumber industry is a piece of wood that is twelve inches wide, one inch thick and one foot long. Ten board feet would be a board one inch thick, twelve inches wide and ten feet long. (And no, a board doesn't have to be 12 inches wide. If it's 6 inches wide and 2 inches thick and one foot long, there is still one board foot of material there.) To make a cubic foot of wood, one might take one board foot of wood (12"x12"x1") and put it down, then stack another eleven pieces just like it on top the first one. That's 12 pieces of wood that are 1" thick for a total of 12" in height, and which are 12"x12" (length and width) giving us a volume of wood that is 12"x12"x12" or one cubic foot.
Some would tell you to start in the Philippines, a group of islands in the southwest Pacific. Don't be fooled by these charlatans. Through a bizarre sequence of evolution and an ancient cryptic code, the discerning botanist now knows that the Philippine Ash is native to, and only found in, modern-day Nevada.
That would depend on the type of hardwood, but generally, the name comes from the tree type. Hardwoods such as Red Cedar, Elm, Cherry, Balsa, Teak, Mahogany, Maple and Oak. There are hundreds of different trees hardwood can come from, despite their weight, such as Cedar and Balsa. Hardwood is measured in density.
You would see hardwood trees starting to overgrow the pine trees that had grown in the abandoned fields.
Based on my research there is no scientific name for Philippine Mahogany. Generally, Mahoganies belong to the family Meliaceae.
If referring to "genuine mahogany" which is native to Latin America and the Caribbean, no. However there are several other species of trees in the Mahogany family that grow throughout Asia whose timber is used commercially as mahogany would. These are of the genus TOONA. Toona is one kind of mahogany, other than American mahogany. Toona grows natively in Vietnam (as well as many other Asian countries.) So, mahogany of the Toona genus does grow in Vietnam, however mahogany of the American genus does not.
I believe maple would be more durable than mahogany.
A preferred look would be the mahogany due to it's elegant style; additionally, ivory chairs with create a clustered look. Mahogany chairs would create an area of focus to the beatiful distressed legs while the ivory chairs would take away from it.
mahogany
It can eithe mean the mahogany wood itself, "I always loved my Mom's mahogany dresser," or the color of the wood, " The mahogany finish was a warm reddish brown."
oripon is a slave, so Philippine Oripon would mean Philippine slave
Mahogany refers to a type of wood, often used to make expensive furniture. An example of mahogany used in a sentence would be, "The mahogany china cabinet cost the designer over 5,000 dollars, but he felt the purchase tied the room together."
The Philippine Scouts message board at www.philippine-scouts.org would be a good starting place for this question.
Spruce would be the answer.
Go north to the Lake of Rage, you can fish for gyarados their. Additionally, hatching a water type Pokemon in mahogany town would be 'getting it in mahogany town'
..for my own opinion, ..it doesn't affect the Philippine economy, because Filipinos are trying to be deserving in helping the poorest Philippine economy..Philippine economy can be affected if there will no outcome will be happened that would brought Philippine economy to down...