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"Ash Like Snow" is the 17th single from the Japanese rock band the Brilliant Green, released on February 6, 2008. It peaked at #8 on the Oricon Singles Chart. [1]This song serves as the second opening theme for the Japanese anime, Mobile Suit Gundam 00.
Eucalyptus regnans, known variously as mountain ash (in Victoria), giant ash or swamp gum (in Tasmania), or stringy gum, [3] is a species of very tall forest tree that is native to the Australia states of Tasmania and Victoria. It is a straight-trunked tree with smooth grey bark, but with a stocking of rough brown bark at the base, glossy green ...
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"There Will Be Love There (Ai no Aru Basho)" (Japanese: There Will Be Love There -愛のある場所-, lit. 'There Will Be Love There (Place with Love)') is the Brilliant Green's third single, released on May 13, 1998, by Sony Music Records, [1] and reissued on October 1, 2000, by Defstar Records. [2]
The following single, titled "Ash Like Snow", appears as an opening theme in the anime series, Mobile Suit Gundam 00. On February 20, 2008, a compilation album titled Complete Single Collection '97–'08 was released. The band also mentioned in an interview that a new studio album was currently in the works, consisting of previously unrecorded ...
Sarcodes is the monotypic genus of a north-west American flowering springtime plant in the heath family , containing the single species Sarcodes sanguinea, commonly called the snow plant or snow flower. It is a parasitic plant that derives sustenance and nutrients from mycorrhizal fungi that attach to tree roots
Fraxinus angustifolia subsp. angustifolia has become a weed in many parts of Australia, where it is known as Desert Ash. It has been widely planted as a street and park tree, and has spread to native bushland and grasslands, as well as stream banks and drainage lines, out-competing native plants for moisture, light and nutrients. [7] [8]
Fraxinus albicans, commonly called the Texas ash, [1] is a species of tree in the olive family . It is native to North America, where it is found from eastern Texas and southern Oklahoma in the United States, to the state of Durango in Mexico. [2] [3] Its natural habitat is in dry, rocky slopes, often over limestone. [4]