I haven't read that whole thread, and won't bother, but here's what I know...
I've built both guitars and mandolins with white and black spruce, as well as red spruce, of course. Tonally, and visually, forget it. No telling them apart. I used to work in a pulp lab, and all the books I studied said they were indistinguishable, even at the cellular level. Yes, in tree form, they're easy to tell apart, but once the needles and cones are gone, even with the bark in place, it can be tricky at best. And no, loggers wouldn't have bothered skipping one for the other; to them, a tree is a tree, and they get paid by tonnage, not species. For milling into lumber or grinding int pulp, spruce is spruce. Since we know that Martin was buying logs in log yards, it's safe to assume that if a log had the right grain count, right size, and had minimal twist, it was a go.
Now, I haven't traveled the forest in question, but everything I've read is that the 3 species overlap greatly. Hell, in my own little 5/8 acre yard here, I have white and black spruces, as well as one that seems to be a hybrid of each). And knowing loggers as well as I do, and knowing log yards as I do(spent 17 years in saw mills and paper mills), logs come from near and from far away, yet they all get lumped together in the yards. the handlers couldn't care less about species, and most don't even know. All they know is unload truck, pile here. Unload other truck, pile here. Unload, pile... Collect pay check.
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