BSD(i) (plus all its derivates) are not Unix,
GNU is not Unix (that makes nearly 200 Linux Distros not Unix along the way),
Mac OSX is not Unix,
and now -- WOW -- IBM's OS/390, AIX, IRIX, SCO and Solaris are!! What a deal!
IBM's OS/390 is out of the race, AIX & IRIX are "staring at open graves" their vendors (IBM & SGI) have apparently changed their mind about them. And now there is this Open Group with a zilion reglementations about a zilion dead or dying projects. And there is SCO that desperatly tries to get any advantage out of their Unix license... This is getting grotesque. I find Solaris to be the only serious Unix(TM) system nowadays.
It's funny. I have bearly used anything of what is legally called a Unix(TM) system. Yet I have a clear notion of what "Unix" is. So, let us not care to much about a label. Mac OSX is "Mac OSX" -- yet so obviously built upon unix like technology, that you might called it a unix, if you want to...
I always refer to FreeBSD as a very clean and good example of what is unix (and indeed FreeBSD is pretty "unix", far more than Linux), although by license it is not. Yet a license does not define the OS, technology is what counts. And on that field, I refer to unix as to system that boots up a kernel, connects physical hardware to devices or mountpoints on my fs, handles multi-threading (SMP today aswell), cares about POSIX (libraries, headers that make porting from similar systems fairly easy, plus a gcc compiler to my hand) and at last gives me a shell user interface. Besides distinct applications/features also shaped my definition of a unix system: a certain directory structure, a set of standard binaries, transparent networking interfaces, udp, nfs, unix domain sockets, ascii configuration, login, passwd, ssh (telnet, rsh earlier) and much more...
You can complete or extensify this list and see that most will still apply to Mac OSX.
One last word: I once had to setup a webserver (apache/mod_ssl/mod_perl) plus quotas and a bunch of ther stuff on a Solaris machine. Coming from what I considered unix, this was pure horror. I never returned to Solaris afterwards and sweared to continue using a "real" unix