I used to work with an older draftsman that served on an aircraft carrier in WWII. He was stationed in the woodshop, a fully equipped mill that worked Teak into 4" planks for the main and other decks on the ship. If there was a fire or crash, the damaged deck would be replaced, on the go, so to speak.
4" thick Teak flight decks - how many board feet is that??
He mentioned the difficulty in milling the teak with only steel tooling, and how the grinderman was always busy.
The amount of Teak that went into the shipping industry is amazing - probably beyond estimation. One wonders what else disappeared as those forests were cut.
Here in the US, before we were the US, the English had marked the tall Pines of the Northeast and the Live Oak in the coastal South as crucial for their ship builders. Hence the phrase "Kingswood" - to keep the poachers out. Another reason the English fought so hard to keep the colonies. They also had Burma at the time, as well as other lumber producing areas.
Going back even further, the various Mediterranean seafaring cultures used their resources to build ships and rule the waves, until their trees were gone. Cyprus, Syria, Greece, Italy.... all had their turn while the trees were available.
All are now largely deforested.