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It is similar in appearance to the Green Ash, making identification difficult.
It commonly occurs in swamps, often with the closely related Green Ash.
They could nuke it tomorrow and I would dance a flamenco on its glowing green ashes."
The Green Ash is widely planted as a street tree in the United States.
Green Ash leaves are similar in color on upper and lower sides, and twigs are smoother.
About 40% of boulevard trees in Edmonton, Alberta are Green Ash.
The most common trees are Cedar Elm, Pecan and Green Ash.
Fraxinus (Green Ash)
Green Ash wood is similar in properties to White Ash wood, and is marketed together as "white ash".
Because of the moist soil, trees such as the American Elm, Green Ash and, in places, Red and Silver maples make up the swamp forest.
In the bottom lands of the forest, the species of trees include Black Walnut, Box Elder, Green Ash, Hackberry, River Birch and Sycamore.
Biology of Caloptilia Fraxinella (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) on Ornamental Green Ash, Fraxinus Pennsylvanica (Oleaceae)
Green Ash is one of the most widely planted ornamental trees throughout the United States and much of Canada but mostly Alberta, including in western areas where it is not native.
Also, these species tend to occupy different habitat niches, with White Ash found in moist upland sites and Green Ash in wet forests of floodplains or swamps, although there is some overlap in habitat distribution.
Jack Pine, Lodgepole Pine, White Spruce, White Birch, Aspen, Green Ash, Basswood, various poplars and willows, and Manitoba Maple are also abundant; Bur Oak is increasingly popular.
The stages are named Big Bluestem, Little Stage on the Prairie, Bur Oak, Green Ash, Snowberry Field, Shady Grove, Chickadee (children's stage), and the Northern Lights Main Stage.
Fraxinus pennsylvanica (Green Ash or Red Ash) is a species of ash native to eastern and central North America, from Nova Scotia west to southeastern Alberta and eastern Colorado, south to northern Florida, and southwest to eastern Texas.
He tossed a cigarette butt and red ashes sailed through the night.
Jan stirred the red ashes with the poker, turning up the smoldering mass of his wallet.
He lost the general election to Chuck Red Ash a popular high school football coach.
The end of a piece of wood that the fire had eaten through fell on to the red ashes and flamed up brightly.
Sheaves of sparks and red ashes flew from the funnels, shining in the atmosphere like stars.
The new firm contemplates sinking down through the Bennett to the Red Ash seam.
Red Ash may refer to:
The Red Ash has a spreading shade-producing habit when a larger tree with an overall greyish green appearance.
To the west of the station existed sidings for the Dyffryn Red Ash Colliery.
The coals from the Seven Foot and the Red Ash will cause it to be a very fine colliery."
Red Ash was an unincorporated community and coal town in Fayette County, West Virginia.
About 1828, Thomas began to dig a tunnel through solid rock into the hillside, hoping to reach the famed Red Ash coal vein.
Fayette County was home to a disastrous mine explosion at Red Ash in March 1900, in which 46 miners were killed.
The Dyffryn Red Ash Colliery sidings have now been built upon and no traces of the tramways exist.
He remained engaged in coal mining, and was vice president and general manager of the Red Ash Coal Co.
Alphitonia whitei - Red Ash (Australia)
There are three narrow seams of coal present: the Red Ash, Little Mine and the Yard Seam.
Maab tripped her and simul-taneously shoved her with the flat of his sword, so that she fell partly into the still red ashes of the campfire.
Forty-six coal miners were killed at the Red Ash Mine at Fayette County, West Virginia.
Alphitonia excelsa, commonly known as the Red Ash or Soap Tree, is a species of tree in the Rhamnaceae family.
Other common names include Red Ash, White-leaf, Pink Almond and Pink Ash.
Shickshinny is located at the lower end of the Wyoming Valley Coal Deposit, near a Red Ash vein that runs across the Susquehanna River near Mocanaqua.
My face pringled and smarted with the sting of the gravel which was blown against it, and the red ashes of my pipe streamed away behind me, dancing fantastically through the darkness.
A small bridge crossed over Crown Hill to the west of the station followed by the Dyffryn Red Ash Colliery sidings and a spur to Cwm Colliery.
Treorchy Comprehensive school was built on the old site of the Tylecoch colliery, with its western athletics track being named the "Red Ash", after it being the remnants of the mine shaft.
It is sometimes divided into two varieties, Fraxinus pennsylvanica var.
The larvae have been recorded feeding on Ficus retusa and Fraxinus pennsylvanica.
Fraxinus pennsylvanica (N)
The River Ash tree (Fraxinus pennsylvanica).
Blue Ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), a tree native to native to eastern and central North America.
The larvae feed on Carya ovata, Fraxinus pennsylvanica, Juglans cinerea and Juglans nigra.
The larvae feed on Camellia sinensis, Camellia oleifera, Fraxinus pennsylvanica, Ternstroemia japonica and Pentaphylax euryoides.
Typical models have been made using Alder, Padauk (also known as Paduak or Padouk; Pterocarpus) and Swamp Ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica).
Biology of Caloptilia Fraxinella (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) on Ornamental Green Ash, Fraxinus Pennsylvanica (Oleaceae)
The larvae feed on Fraxinus species, including Fraxinus americana, Fraxinus chinensis, Fraxinus mandshurica and Fraxinus pennsylvanica.
Experiments in Estonia have shown that several North American ash species are susceptible, especially the Black ash (Fraxinus nigra), and to a lesser extent the Green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica).