Re: Does Saltwater preserve wood?
Rain water is 'sweet water' and is death to wood.
Salt tends to make life inconvenient for organisms that contribute to rot. Salt is a natural germ and small organism killer, and is just generally a good sanitizer.
But the old timbers were also treated and replaced over the years. I believe they were tarred or pitched. So, you get some treatment, plus salt, and it bodes much better for wood than fresh, sweet water.
There is much more science behind it, which would take into account the am't of UV exposure, the waters it sailed in, the timber density, etc.
For example, 'old growth' timber is much denser than what is harvested now. The timbers were already much more rot resistant from pulling minerals out of the rich soil for decades. Ya just don't get wood like that anymore. 'Old growth' lumber is the way to go. That's all they had back in the day.
For purposes of the tour, the guide provided good 'food for thought' information. Invariably, when this subject arises, someone (me sometimes, too) will remind others that old timbers are harvested from inland lakes/rivers and such and it's actually a thriving business -- this reclaimed, submerged wood is very valuable. It usually had 'something' going for it in terms of the exact type of water it sat submerged in and how it was actually preserving it because it was halting the rot. But rain water ain't got that 'something' going for it. Rain water bad.
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