On surfaces not ordinarily seen (undersides of drawer bottoms, especially) the marks are probably from a scrub plane; it had a more deeply curved edge, for quickly removing wood from rough-sawn - or even split - boards down to a relatively flat surface with shallow grooves. The jack plane would have far less curvature, and further flatten the surface. Even planes used for finish flattening are sometimes given a tiny radius at each corner to avoid showing edge marks. This can be as little as a couple of passes with the stone when sharpening, and it will still be helpful.
Many times, scrub planes were used at an angle to the grain, or even straight across. A few passes at different angles does wonders for showing where there are still low spots, or twist! Wikipedia has a nice picture of a disassembled scrub plane, and the article shows links to other types. "Jack" was the all-purpose type.