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chestnut

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chestnut

1. any N temperate fagaceous tree of the genus Castanea, such as C. sativa (sweet or Spanish chestnut), which produce flowers in long catkins and nuts in a prickly bur
2. the hard wood of any of these trees, used in making furniture, etc.
3. 
a. a reddish-brown to brown colour
b. (as adjective): chestnut hair
4. a horse of a yellow-brown or golden-brown colour
5. a small horny callus on the inner surface of a horse's leg
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

chestnut

A light, coarse-grained, medium-hard wood, used for ornamental work and trim. See also: Wood
Illustrated Dictionary of Architecture Copyright © 2012, 2002, 1998 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

chestnut

[′ches‚nət]
(botany)
The common name for several species of large, deciduous trees of the genus Castanea in the order Fagales, which bear sweet, edible nuts.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

chestnut

A light, coarse-grained, medium-hard timber; used for ornamental work and trim.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Chestnut

 

an arboreal plant of the genus Castanea of the family Fagaceae. There are 14 known species, distributed in North America, Japan, China, and the Mediterranean region. In the USSR, one species is found on the Black Sea Shore of the Caucasus and in Transcaucasia. The European, or Spanish, chestnut (Castanea sativa) is cultivated. The chestnut tree is large (height, up to 35 m; diameter, 2 m) and long-lived (500 and more years). It has a large, spreading crown and a strong, deep root system. The flowers, which are gathered into catkins, are small, unisexual or bisexual, and cross-pollinating. The fruits are nuts (length and width, 1.5– cm), with a delicate grayish brown woody pericarp. Three nuts are usually found in each involucre. The tree begins to fruit after 5–10 years. When the tree is 50 years old, it produces at least 70 kg of nuts (up to 1 ton per hectare).

The chestnut is demanding in terms of light, warmth, and moisture. The tree grows best on brown semihumid acid soils. Chestnut trees are cultivated in Italy, Spain, France, and the USA. In the USSR, they are grown in the Caucasus, the Crimea, Transcaucasia, and Moldavia. The nuts are edible in fresh and cooked form. They are used as an ersatz coffee and as an ingredient in candy. The chestnut kernel contains more than 60 percent starch, up to 17 percent sugar, 8– percent nitrogen compounds, and over 2 percent fat. Chestnut wood, which is of very high quality is valued in wood-working industries and is also used in construction. It is resistant to rot. The wood, the bark, and the nutshells, which are rich in tanning and dyeing substances, are used in the production of textile dyes. There are several types of chestnut trees; they differ in size, taste of the nut, and rate of growth. In the USSR, there are several varieties, including the large-fruited and small-fruited types. Foreign varieties include the Lyon and the Neapolitan; both have very large and tasty fruits.

Usually chestnuts are propagated by seeds. However, the best varieties are propagated by grafts and cuttings. The seeds are stratified in the autumn and planted in a nursery in the spring. The seedling stocks are then grafted with a fistula or bud. Chestnut trees are grown on slopes in deep, well moistened, fertile soils. Each seedling is planted in an area measuring 18 m X 18 m or 20 m X 20 m. The spaces between the rows are used for temporary plantings (for example, filbert trees). The crown of the chestnut tree is formed by 8– boughs and by a trunk measuring 70– cm high. The tending of the soil, including its fertilization and irrigation, is very similar to the care of apple orchards. The most dangerous insect pests are the moth and weevil. Chestnut trees are susceptible to several diseases, including root and trunk cancer and core brown rot. Besides the species of the family Fagaceae, there are species of the family Hippocas-tanaceae that are also called chestnuts, for example, the horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum).

REFERENCES

Rikhter, A. A., and V. A. Kolesnikov. Orekhoplodnye kuVtury. Simferopol’, 1952.
Krotkevich, P. G. Kul’tury orekhoplodnykh. Kiev, 1954.

V. A. KOLESNIKOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
This one comes out of Chinkapin oak (also called Chestnut oak).
Table 1.--Total number of seedlings of each tree species counted in all experimental plots and mean ([+ or -] SE) abundance/plot for each species; n = 18 10 x 10 m plots Number of Abundance Tree species Common name seedlings of seedlings Acer negundo Box elder 12 0.67 [+ or -] 0.12 Acer saccharum Sugar maple 530 29.4 [+ or -] 8.41 Asimina triloba Pawpaw 16 0.89 [+ or -] 0.43 Carya cordiformis Butternut hickory 8 0.44 [+ or -] 0.33 Fagus grandifolia American beech 3 0.17 [+ or -] 0.17 Fraxinus americana White ash 130 7.22 [+ or -] 2.23 Prunus serotina Black cherry 90 5.00 [+ or -] 1.67 Quercus muehlenbergii Chinkapin oak 4 0.22 [+ or -] 0.14 Ulmus americana American elm 68 3.78 [+ or -] 0.71
Caption: Top right: A wound early in this chinkapin oak's life allowed rot to hollow out the base.
Other prominent white oaks include Quercus prinus, the shallow lobed chestnut; Quercus muehlenbergii, or chinkapin oak; Quercus michauxii, also called swamp chestnut; Quercus bicolor or swampwhite; and Quercus macrocarpa, the burr oak.
But the standout was Kansas where seven different nominators located the biggest paper birch, narrowleaf cottonwood, Washington hawthorn, dwarf chinkapin oak, western soapberry, little walnut, and two co-champion oriental arborvitae.
White oaks include Burr oak, overcup oaks, post oak, swamp chestnut and chinkapin oak.
190 Eastern redcedar Junipents virginiana 249 Chinkapin oak Quercus muehlenbergii 558 Elms Ulmus alata, U.
Quercus muhlenbergii Engelm.; Yellow, Chinkapin, or Chinquapin Oak; Woods along creek on east side; Rare (one tree); C = 4; BSUH 13935.
Chinese tallow Triadica selnfera (L.) Small chinkapin oak Quercus muehlenbergii Engelm.
Quercus muhlenbergii Engelm.; Yellow, Chinkapin, or Chinquapin Oak; Ridgetop woods and adjacent upland slopes; Infrequent; C = 4; BSUH 13362.
melanocarpa Cherry Sour Prunus cerasus Chinkapin Florida Castanea alnifolia Cinnecord Acacia choriophylla Coconut Palm Cocos nucifera Cocoplum Chrysobalanus icaco Colubrina Coffee Colubrina arborescens Colubrina Cuba Colubrina cubensis Corkwood Leitneria floridana Cranberrybush American Viburnum trilobum Crossopetalum Florida Crossopetalum rhacoma Cupania Florida Cupania glabra Cypress Cuyamaca Cupressus arizonica v.
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