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When ripe they are a black-gray color and they become wrinkled when dry. The seed is whitish yellow and covered with an oily membrane. It has compound leaves with typically 7–9 (but range from 3–15) ovate to ovate-lanceolate leaflets with serrate margins. [7] Each leaflet is 20–40 cm long at maturity and comes to a point at the apex.
Windswept may refer to: Windswept (song), a song performed by Bryan Ferry; Windswept (Steuben, Maine), the summer house of writer Mary Ellen Chase; Windswept, a book by Mary Ellen Chase; Windswept Acres-Powers House; Windswept Farm; Windswept House: A Vatican Novel; Nematoceras dienemum, also known as the "windswept helmet orchid"
Valhalla Hills is a 2015 video game developed by Funatics Software and published by Daedalic Entertainment. The game is a city-building and strategy game in which players control a tribe of Vikings to build and maintain a settlement with the objective of reaching a portal atop a mountain to enter Valhalla .
"Windswept" is a single performed by Bryan Ferry, the lead vocalist for Roxy Music. The track is the third and final single from the chart-topping album Boys and Girls which was released in 1985, but unlike the previous singles it did not reach the top 40 in the UK singles chart. [2] The track features Mark Knopfler, the guitarist of Dire Straits.
Windswept Adan (Japanese: アダンの風, Hepburn: Adan no Kaze) is the seventh studio album by Japanese singer-songwriter Ichiko Aoba, released on 2 December 2020 by her label, Hermine. Conceived as a soundtrack for an imaginary film based on a narrative written by Aoba, the concept album follows the story of a young girl who is sent away by ...
The Hanging Hills of Connecticut (Metacomet Ridge range); upfaulting visible from right to left. Horizontal movement between blocks along a strike-slip fault. Fault blocks are very large blocks of rock, sometimes hundreds of kilometres in extent, created by tectonic and localized stresses in Earth's crust.
Windswept Farm is a historic home located at Clinton in Dutchess County, New York. The main block of the house was built about 1823 and is a Federal-style dwelling. The main block is a 2-story, five-bay timber-frame house. A 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story gabled addition was completed about 1840. Also on the property are two barns and a cider mill. [2]
Explorer Zebulon Pike first coined the name the Flint Hills in 1806 when he entered into his journal, "passed very ruff flint hills". The underlying bedrock of the hills is a flinty limestone. The largest town in the area is Manhattan, Kansas, and the hills can be accessed from the Flint Hills Scenic Byway, which passes through the region.