Yes, I was kind of disappointed to hear you weren't going to go through with it as an experiment, and I didn't mean at all to be discouraging talking about glue vs oak(s).
It's been a long time since I was boat building, and it's totally different than bows, and so I'm sorry I meandered OT!
I actually hate to laminate using epoxy and thin layers of wood, (always did) much prefer working with whole wood, and especially enjoy what is happening here on PA. Love the bows made from saplings and limbs that I see. That to me is really getting to the heart of of wood working, and a connection with ancient peoples.
Willie, I'm way behind the times on what is current in boatbuilding, so can't say if there are new scantling "rules" other than of thumb for thicknesses in laminating, and, yes absolutely shrinkage and swelling are all over the map for every type of wood, direction of grain, and also individual trees, down to even parts of individual trees. So I would guess that the older rules of thumb still apply in that field. The Gougeon Bros. wrote the book (literally) on wood and epoxy construction back in the 70's, and that book is a must read in that field, if you're interested in the technical aspects.
So I'm going to shut up now, and read about bows again, and try to build this one I'm working on so it lasts more than a month.