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When the fire had died down into white ashes Dean got up.
By now she had finished packing the first eye in clean white ashes.
Within instants, only white ashes drifted in the cold air.
White ashes were carried as far as 30 miles by the winds.
Only a few white ashes and a dark splotch on the sandy ground remained.
The end of the staff vanished in flame, and then white ashes drifted across the stones.
A quick look toward the white wizard showed me but a heap of white ashes.
All the manuscript had been burned, and the blue flames were flickering amongst the white ashes.
This time the darkness - and the flux chaos - vanished in the swirling white ashes.
The fire had died to white ashes and through the badly improvised shutters in the windows the cold morning light stretched across the floor.
The bowman flared into a pillar of fire, white ashes dropping across the wall with the rain.
The fire still burned, thin yellow flames among the white ashes, but the lamps had been extinguished.
In the bottom was no more than a few crumpled white ashes and a blister of paint where the flame had caught the side.
I cleaned my teeth, night and morning, with a mixture of bee's honey and white ashes.
Then she took some of the white ashes and threw them toward that city, muttering curses as she did so.
The fire glowed through white ashes, died.
White ashes drifted across the charred wagon seat.
The remains of a fire, nothing more than some charred wood and feathery white ashes, were visible below the vat.
The embers of the cooking fires were hidden by white ashes; only a single torch remained that had not burned out.
The name White Ash derives from the glaucous undersides of the leaves.
Similar in appearance to the White Ash.
I poked the fire with a stick, turning up masses of live coals and clouds of white ashes.
Then he concentrates once more, and the bodies turn to white ashes, as do the blades and the remaining tube weapon.
It was charred hair on his eyebrows, curled white ashes that powdered in his fingers.
In one place there was a fire of red-hot coals, the rest was full of white ashes.
It is the most widely distributed of all the American ashes.
Out of all the native tree types planted by the village's early settlers 90 to 140 years ago, American Ash is the sole surviving tree species.
Fraxinus americana (American Ash) is also commonly referred to as White Ash.
The down side of the fair is summed up by an amusing small etching at Rona Schneider by the American Ash Can School painter John Sloan.
Fraxinus americana (White Ash or American Ash) is a species of Fraxinus native to eastern North America found in mesophytic hardwood forests from Nova Scotia west to Minnesota, south to northern Florida, and southwest to eastern Texas.
Fraxinus americana (N)
The former is typified by red oak, white ash (Fraxinus americana), basswood (Tilia spp.)
Allegheny hardwood forests consist of black cherry, white ash (Fraxinus americana), and tulip poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera).
In secondary forests, red spruce, white pine, white ash (Fraxinus americana), eastern hemlock, black cherry (Prunus serotina), and red maple are present.
The White ash (Fraxinus americana) and the Asian species known as Manchurian ash (Fraxinus mandschurica) showed only minor symptoms in the study.
It is closely related to Fraxinus americana (white ash), and is sometimes treated as a variety of it, as Fraxinus americana var.
The larvae feed on Fraxinus species, including Fraxinus americana, Fraxinus chinensis, Fraxinus mandshurica and Fraxinus pennsylvanica.
The larvae have been recorded feeding on Tecoma species (including Tecoma stans), Fraxinus americana, Fraxinus excelsior and Fraxinus platycarpa.
The species occurs in the forests of Midwestern North America, usually associated with white ash (Fraxinus americana), but sometimes with the American tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera) or species of maple.
Another experiment showed a water extract of the chemical was either lethal or highly damaging to 11 North American hardwoods and 34 conifers, with the white ash (Fraxinus americana) being the only plant not adversely affected.
Described as new to science in 2012, it has a northerly eastern North American distribution, where it occurs north of 44 N. The fungus fruits under hardwoods, particularly American aspen (Populus grandidentata) and American ash (Fraxinus americana).