Bog-wood

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Excavation of morta from Sava river

Bog-wood, also known as abonos and morta, especially in the world of the pipesmokers,[1] is a material from trees that have been buried in peat bogs and preserved from decay by the acidic and anaerobic bog conditions, sometimes for hundreds or even thousands of years. The wood is usually stained brown by tannins dissolved in the acidic water. Bog-wood represents the early stages in the fossilisation of wood, with further stages ultimately forming lignite and coal over a period of many millions of years. Bog-wood may come from any tree species naturally growing near or in bogs, including oak (Quercus "bog oak"), pine (Pinus), yew (Taxus), swamp cypress (Taxodium) and kauri (Agathis). Bog-wood is often removed from fields etc. and placed in clearance cairns. It is a rare form of timber that is "comparable to some of the world's most expensive tropical hardwoods".[2]

Formation process

The soils that are mostly wet, sandy, gravel – and clay-like, deep and fertile usually found above high underground waters are the most suitable habitats for the growth of oak forest (quercus robur). The largest oak forests thrive best on lowland and slight upland soils of the diluvial geological era, the vallies of river basins being especially suitable sites for this type of oak.[1]

Morta color based on age

Variations in the water level, floads, marshes formation – all are conditions that in a very special way promote the growth of this particular tree. Because of a continuous change of the direction of the river flow on a greater or lesser degree, the mainstreams weave through the vallies constantly forming live meanders. In its meandering course, the river undermines the banks covered with forests, the trees fall in to the river and get drifted away in the water. When the trunk gets trapped by its branches and roots to the river bed, in time it becomes covered with the layers of mud, sand and gravel. Deprived of oxygen the wood undergoes the process of fossilization and a long process of morta formation.[1]

During hundreds and thousands of years, under the influence of the minerals and iron from the water, the decomposition of oak timber is considerably slower. In the formation of morta a special role is played by the currents of the underground waters, providing solution of the ingredients which make compounds with larger quantities of tanin from the wood and in this way induce darkening of the wood colour. The centuries-long process of timber change, often termed “maturation” results in colour alteration from golden-brown to completely black, and its hardness is increased to such a level that later it can only be carved with the use of specially grind and exceptionally firm tools.[1]

The time necessary for the oak to transform from the end of its biological growth to abonos is various. According to the conditions under which “maturation” takes place, this process can last two, three, or seven thousands years. Due to the ecological reasons menitioned above no two trunks can be found of the same colour.[1]

Excavation sites

Bog-wood from Sava river, BiH

Sites of bog-wood in the world are very rare. In the sites expected to accommodate it (in Croatia mainly in the valley of the river Sava and its branches) morta is hard to find, the access to the river bank and its bed is usually difficult, and morta recovery usually results in failure. Therefore, excessive preparations and engagement of a large number of professionals skilled in diving in the murky waters and in complete darkness are necessary. Morta is found in the entire dark and its pulling out of the water is in fact the first sight of it after many thousands of years. The age of morta found in Croatian rivers ranges from several hundred years in the rivers on the southern part to the oldest retrieved so far in the river Krapina being 8290 years old.[1]

Saving the quality of wood as the material for potential further processing is a very delicate matter.The process of wood desiccation is complex, but despite greatest care most of raw wood is unsuitable for further processing. For this reason the price of quality abonos raw material is very high.[1]

Aesthetics

Aesthetic effect of morta is based on the very experience of naturally formed colour, noticeable wood structure, its “imperfect” appearance, and the fact that parts of the wood are combined which by their variation in the colour, directions of growth rings, or certain “damage” convey a strong aesthetic and ethical message about the immensity of the past times. Deep impression of the passing of time is also grounded on the knowledge of longevity of wood and the miracle of its intactness indicates that wood is not affected by usual weather conditions or vermin which naturally spoil the looks and strength of wood. Semi dry bog-wood is exceptionally hard, sometimes of the golden or copper colour, or with a tint of some other hue. Older wood can be completely black. This colour is particularly specific so every connoisseur of materials is able to notice the profound permeation of the wood structure by darkness, noble black colour of “live” wood so different from that of black fossil or coal. This value of deep darkness is a special feature of abonos as construction material whether it be used for the making of semi manufactured goods, veneer, planks or bams, depending on purpose of the final product, or for final goods: floor coverings, furniture, doors, window frames, sculptures, and various decorative objects and items for everyday use.[1]

Uses

Bog wood in an aquarium releases tannins into the water, turning the water brown.

Because bog-wood can remain undecayed for thousands of years it is of use in dendrochronology, often providing records much older than living trees. Wooden artefacts lost or buried in bogs become preserved as bog-wood, and are important in archaeology.

Bog-wood may be used in joinery to make furniture or wood carving. Bog-wood sometimes has aesthetically interesting shapes (similar to driftwood) and as such may be use as ornaments. As bog-wood dries out, it may crack or split, but this does not necessarily detract from the aesthetic qualities of a bog-wood sculpture. It is a traditionally favoured wood for the carving of dirks (bìodagan) and sgian-dubh in the Scottish Highlands due to its natural colour.

Bog-wood is used in aquaria for ornaments, providing hiding places for fish and a growing surface for plants such as Java fern.[3] Additionally, the leaching of organic compounds such as tannins into the water causes a brown colouration. It is also a staple part of the diet for Pleco, Ancistrus and Panaque catfish as it aids digestion.[citation needed]

During the nineteenth century bog oak was used to make carved decorative items such as jewellery [4] and in some parts of the world it is still used for making of unique artifacts.[5]

Souvenirs made out of morta / bog-wood
Tobacco pipe made of morta / bog-wood

Tobacco pipes

One of the uses of morta is for making of tobacco pipes. It is an ideal material because of a high percentage of minerals, reaching up to 12%, which makes morta especially resistant to burning, and thousand-year long washing erased all traces of tannin, resin and similar ingredients, giving a completely neutral taste during tobacco smoking. Finalized piece is beautiful, the structure of the wood can be strikingly stunning – unique, and pipe smoking is a special pleasure. When smoked, tobacco yields neutral taste, positively neutral, of course. All this makes bog-wood invaluable in pipe smoking and results in a high demand by the pipe smokers.[1]

Purchasing quality material is much too complicated and the processing of material is difficult with a relatively high portion of write-offs. Morta is hard to carve, some parts can be supple while others extremely hard, the percentage of hidden flaws in material is huge, which all may cause the pipe during its final production stages to crack, and dozens of hours of work to be in vain. Today there is a relatively small number of pipemakers who make pipes out of morta.[1]

See also

  • Driftwood
  • Mopane wood, recovered from deserts and often sold as an alternative to bogwood for aquaria; it is sometimes incorrectly labelled as bogwood or charred bogwood.
  • Aquarium substrates
  • Swamp kauri
  • Sweet Track, a timber causeway in Somerset, England, its timbers preserved in waterlogged ground for over 5,800 years.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Đenović, Davorin. "What is abonos-morta?". Retrieved 2 December 2013. 
  2. "Huge 5,000-year-old oak unearthed". BBC. 2012-09-26. Retrieved 2012-09-27. 
  3. "How to grow plants on bogwood". AquaDaily. 2009-01-20. Retrieved 2009-01-31. 
  4. Tanenbaum, Carole; Rita Silvan (2006). Fabulous Fakes: A Passion for Vintage Costume Jewelry. Toronto: Madison Press. p. 22. 
  5. "Souvenirs made out of abonos". Retrieved 2 December 2013. 

External links

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