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Cork (material)

Cork material is a subset of generic cork tissue, harvested for commercial use primarily from the Cork oak tree, Quercus suber, with Portugal producing most cork worldwide.

Cork's elasticity combined with its near-impermeability makes it suitable as a material for bottle stoppers, especially for wine bottles. Its low density makes it a suitable material for fishing floats and buoys. Sheets of cork, often the byproduct of more lucrative stopper production, are used to make floor tiles and bulletin boards.

Cork demand has increased due to a larger proportion of wine being sealed with cork rather than being sold in bulk. Since a tree's bark can only be harvested once a decade or so, supply is highly inelastic. Top quality corks are quite expensive, so cheaper brands have switched to lower quality cork, synthetic plastic stoppers, screwcaps, or other closures.

Recently cork has also been used in rocket technologie due to its fire resistance. It can also be used as bricks for the outer wall of a house. ( Seen at the Portugal Pavillion Expo 2000 )

Cork contamination with harmless but foul-smelling trichloroanisole is one of the primary causes of cork taint in wine.

Note that the cork oak is unrelated to the family of "cork trees", which are not commonly used for cork product:

  • Phellodendron amurense - Amur or Chinese cork tree
  • Phellodendron japonicum - Japanese cork tree
  • Phellodendron lavallei
  • Phellodendron sachalinense

External links:

Cork production

Referenced By

APCOR | Cork | Cork oak | Dewar flask | History of Swimming | List of Conservation topics | Postmark | Quercus suber | Stamps and postal history of the United States | Stopper | US postage stamps | WikiProject Conservation worldwide

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cork (material)".

 

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