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yahay kaayo mo no!

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Q: What organ of a buffalo did the Plains Indians use to make yellow paint?
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What has the least complex organization an organism an organ a population or a cell?

a cell


What is a Tierce en Taille?

Tierce en Taille literally means, "Tierce in the Tenor". It comes from the organ stop known as the Seventeenth, known in French as the Tierce. On an organ, where the pitch of each stop is given in terms of the length of the organ pipe two octaves below middle C, the Tierce is 1 3/5, meaning the lowest note of the Tierce is sounded by a pipe roughly 1 3/5 feet long, or about 19 inches long. When a C is played on the organ, the Tierce stop sounds an E two octaves above that note. Because it sounds a harmonic of a note and not the note itself, the Tierce is usually used in combination with other "fundamental" stops. As such, it gives a hollow, percussive quality to a note, which lends itself well to solo lines. In the Baroque and Classical era, Tierces were almost always found only on French organs. More so than the organ music written in other countries, French organ music specified the organ registration (which organ stops were to be used) for a piece according to a fixed plan. In organ music written in other countries, the organist was generally more free to select the registration that he felt best suited the piece. But in France, all a composer needed to do was to write "Plain Jeu", "Grand Jeu", or "Tierce en Taille" at the top of the piece, and it was understood precisely which stops were to be pulled when the piece was played. Hence, famous pieces came to be known by their registrations, such as Marchand's Dialogue sur les Grands Jeux. Many pieces came to be know simply as Tierce en Taille, and the term came to be used interchangably for a particular organ registration or for a particular style of music. As a style, Tierce en Taille is characterized by a high harmony played by the right hand on a chorus of flute stops, and a melody played by the left hand on a combination of fundamental stops and the Tierce. Most Tierce en Taille pieces are quiet, contemplative and ethereal...they demand to be listened to, but quickly carry the listener away to another world.


What are facts about mount wellington?

Mount Wellington lies directly behind Hobart and is the city's dominant feature. It is 1,270 metres high and was formed during the Permian, Triassic and Jurassic ages. The Organ Pipes are the predominant feature, named for both appearance and sounds produced by the wind. The Van Diemen's Land Aborigines were the first to see the Mountain, calling it either Unghanyahletta or Pooranetere. The first white man to record its existence was Lieutenant William Bligh in 1788.During early exploration the Mountain underwent many name changes, including Table Hill, Montagne du Plateau, Skiddaw, Mount Collins, and Table Mountain after its similarity to Table Mountain, Cape of Good Hope. Between 1822 and 1824 it was re-named Mount Wellington after the Duke of Wellington. George Bass was the first white man to climb the Mountain, in 1798.During settlement the Mountain's greatest asset was water, firstly from the Hobart Rivulet and later carried from mountain streams through an extensive system of aqueducts, pipelines and reservoirs to supply the town below. For over a hundred years Mount Wellington was exploited for its natural resources � timber, stone, food, ice, skins, ferns and seeds. Timber was the main commodity � wattle, she-oak, stringy bark and blue gum � and was used for building and firewood. Tree ferns were cut down and used extensively for decoration and lined the streets and arches during the Royal Tour in 1901. Concern by conservationists and tourist promoters regarding denudation began in 1870, but it was not until 1906 it was declared a Public Park.The cliffs, boulder fields, swamps and gullies provide diverse habitat for fauna and flora. During the nineteenth century Mount Wellington became a mecca for botanists. Examples of flora and fauna were sent to England for examination and classification and many still bear the names of the botanists who collected them. New discoveries continue to be made. Over 400 plant species are found on Mount Wellington while 62 species of birds were recorded in 1976. Animal life is mainly nocturnal. Snakes, frogs and lizards are common during the day. A living fossil, Anaspides tasmaniae, a tiny fresh water shrimp, was recorded in 1837.Mount Wellington has a vivid history. It has been devastated by fire and flood; the scar of a major landslip is clearly visible. It has provided sites for weather stations, AUSSAT's Barth Station and telecommunication facilities. Recreational purposes have included bushwalking, foot racing, cliff climbing and sightseeing. Many huts were built on the Mountain and by the 1930s a network of tracks existed. The Mountain was also popular with skiers, but lost favour when the snow became unreliable. The Pinnacle Road, opened in 1937, enables easy access to the top. Mount Wellington continues to be Hobart's major tourist attraction, offering spectacular panoramic views of the city, river, land and sea below.


What are the two mountain ranges?

There are more than two mountain ranges: Mountain Ranges in the United States are: Absaroka Range, Montana and Wyoming Adirondack Mountains, New York Alaska Range, Alaska Allegheny Mountains Amargosa Range, California Appalachian Mountains, Eastern United States Arbuckle Mountains, Oklahoma Baird Mountains, Alaska Basin and Range Province Arizona, Nevada, Utah Bear River Mountains, Utah and Idaho Beartooth Mountains, Montana and Idaho Beaverhead Mountains, Montana and Idaho Bendeleben Mountains, Alaska Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming Bitterroot Range, Montana and Idaho Black Hills, South Dakota and Wyoming Blue Ridge Mountains Boise Mountains, Idaho Boston Mountains, Arkansas Boulder Mountain, Utah Boulder Mountains, Idaho Boulder Mountains, Montana Brabazon Range, Alaska Bridger Range, Montana Bridger Mountains, Wyoming Brooks Range, northern Alaska Cabinet Mountains, Montana Cascade Range Castle Mountains, Montana Catskill Mountains Chinati Mountains, Texas Chisos Mountains, Big Bend National Park, Texas Chugach Mountains Clearwater Mountains, Idaho Coeur d'Alène Mountains, Montana and Idaho Columbia Mountains, Canada and U.S. Coso Range, California Crazy Mountains, Montana Darby Mountains, Alaska Davidson Mountains, Alaska Davis Mountains, Texas Delaware Mountains, Texas DeLong Mountains, Alaska Driftless Area, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin East Humboldt Range, Nevada Elk Mountains, Colorado Elkhorn Mountains, Montana Endicott Mountains, Alaska Fairweather Range, Alaska Flathead Range, Montana Franklin Mountains, Alaska Franklin Mountains, Texas Front Range, Colorado Gallatin Range, Montana Garnet Range, Montana Gila Mountains, Arizona Granite Mountains, Wyoming Granite Range, Alaska Great Smoky Mountains Green Mountains, Wyoming Green Mountains, Vermont Gros Ventre Range, Wyoming Guadalupe Mountains, Texas Henry Mountains, Utah Huron Mountains, Michigan John Long Mountains, Montana Kettle River Range, Washington and British Columbia Kigluaik Mountains, Alaska La Sal Mountains, Utah Laguna Mountains, California Lake Range, Nevada Laramie Mountains, Wyoming Lemhi Range, Idaho Lewis Range, Montana Livingston Range, Montana Madison Range, Montana Manzano Mountains, New Mexico Misquah Hills, Minnesota Monashee Mountains, British Columbia and Washington Mosquito Range, Colorado Ocooch Mountains,Wisconsin Olympic Mountains, Washington Oquirrh Mountains, Utah Oregon Coast Range, Oregon Organ Mountains, New Mexico Ortiz Mountains, New Mexico Ouachita Mountains, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas Owl Creek Mountains, Wyoming Ozark Plateau, Missouri, Arkansas, and Oklahoma Panamint Range, California Peninsular Ranges, Phillip Smith Mountains, Alaska Piercy Mountain Range, North Carolina Pinaleno Mountains, Arizona Pioneer Mountains, Idaho Pioneer Mountains, Montana Porcupine Mountains Western Upper Peninsula of Michigan Pryor Mountains, Montana Red Mountains, Wyoming Robinson Mountains, Alaska Rocky Mountains, western United States and Canada Romanzof Mountains, Alaska Ruby Mountains, Nevada Sacramento Mountains, New Mexico Saint Elias Mountains, southern Alaska, Yukon and British Columbia Salish Mountains, Montana Salmon River Mountains, Idaho Salt River Range, Wyoming San Francisco Peaks, Arizona San Jacinto Mountains, California San Juan Mountains, Colorado Sandia Mountains, New Mexico Sangre de Cristo Mountains, Colorado and New Mexico Santa Ana Mountains, California Sawatch Range, Colorado Sawtooth Mountains, Minnesota Sawtooth Range, Idaho Schell Creek Range, Nevada Schwatka Mountains, Alaska Selkirk Mountains, British Columbia, Idaho and Washington Seward Peninsula, Alaska Sheep Range, Nevada Shenandoah Mountains Shoshone Range, Idaho Shoshone Range, Nevada Shubelik Mountains, Alaska Sierra Nevada, California, Nevada Siskiyou Mountains, Oregon Smoky Mountains, Idaho Snake Range, Nevada Snowy Range, Wyoming Soldier Mountains, Idaho Spring Mountains, Nevada Superstition Mountains, Arizona Sutter Buttes, California Swan Range, Montana Talladega Mountains, Central Alabama Tenmile Range, Colorado Teton Range, Wyoming Texas Hill Country Tobacco Root Mountains, Montana Toiyabe Range, Nevada Tushar Mountains, Utah Uinta Mountains, Utah and Colorado Uwharrie Mountains, North Carolina Waring Mountains, Alaska Wasatch Range, Utah Washburn Range, Wyoming West Humboldt Range, Nevada West Mountains, Idaho White Cloud Mountains, Idaho White Mountains, Alaska White Mountains, Arizona White Mountains, California White Mountains, New Hampshire Whitefish Range, Montana Wichita Mountains, Oklahoma Wind River Range, Wyoming Wolf Mountains, Montana Wyoming Range, Wyoming York Mountains, Alaska


Related questions

What organ of a buffalo did plains Indians use to make yellow paint?

yahay kaayo mo no!


What organ of a buffalo did Indians use to make yellow paint?

yahay kaayo mo no!


What organ of buffalo did plain Indians use to make yellow paint?

yahay kaayo mo no!


What buffalo organ did Indians use to make yellow paint?

None. Flowers, berries, and other natural items were used.


What organ of the buffalo did yellow paint come from?

the gallbladder


What organ of buffalo is used for yellow paint?

they used the liver of a buffolo


What organ of a buffalo did Plains Indians use to make an arrowhead?

Some Plains arrow points were made of antelope, elk or buffalo bone (not from animal organs), attached with sinew taken from a buffalo's legs or spine. Bone points do not survive as well as those of metal or stone so there are only a few in museums today. As soon as white traders arrived, natives quickly obtained ready-made metal points as well as thin sheet metal and tools for making their own. Stone and bone points became obsolete at that instant. Jim Hamm in his book "Bows and Arrows of the Native Americans" states that he has seen bone points made by Kiowas on the southern Plains, plus a few from the northern Plains, but they are today quite rare. His experiments show that antelope leg bones make sharper bone points than either buffalo or deer - heating the point allows it to take a sharper edge as well as hardening it.


What kind of organ do the buffalo Sabres use?

harp


Organs affected by yellow fever?

The liver is the most important organ affected in yellow fever.


What did people hunt on the organ trail?

deer, Buffalo, rabbits, birds, any thing to keep them living


Which organ can be best described as yellow hair like strands in a grasshopper?

Tympanum


A yellow liquid that helps digest food. and in which organ is is found?

nerve system