It's the "Danse des Sylphes" from "Faust's Damnation" by Hector Berlioz
Animals that eat pieces of an organism or swallow them whole. :)
Sadly, usually in pieces with a fork lift truck. I asked this question last week in a British Zoo and the answer was as above... with the reluctant add on "in pieces". This was from the maintenance man who did the deeds. Just as you can't eat an elephant all at once, you cant dispose of one whole either. The good news was the pieces went to a museum in Edinburgh and other places for valuable research. Wendy lives on... in pieces and was a ripe old age when she passed away having given pleasure to many people!
Yes, mussels are decomposers. they eat off of dead plants and pieces of animals.
Chickens to can be trained to play the xylophone because they peck. They can be trained by guiding them with pieces of food.
Yes, a mussel is a decomposer. Their eating habits come from dead plants and pieces of animals. Decomposers metabolize organic matter, and release elements.
the ten pieces that saint saens wrote were called the Carnival of the Animals
Elephant has a lot since its so huge.
Basically it's valuable because it's rare. You get it from elephant tusks, and not that much from each elephant either. And you have to kill the elephant to get it. In order to protect the animals, all trade in new ivory has been banned, making the existing pieces even more valuable.
The french horn is a beautiful instrument used in many pieces in soaring melodies.
The blue whale is that is why it is endangered because people hunt to many. they are the biggest animals that are selling but only bits and pieces are sold for example the blubber is put into lipstick
Its an elephant. I don't know how to put the pieces together to make it an elephant, but if you move them all away from the center you see the outline of an elephant in the stone.
scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. they break it down into smaller pieces then decomposers come eat those pieces j.c
Camille Saint-Saens played the organ and the piano. He also composed works for both as well as for orchestra. One of his better known compositions is the Symphony No 3 in C Minor (aka The Organ Symphony) written for Organ and Orchestra.
Harmonize is a musical term referring to the way a chord and melody are used together. You can make harmony with chords accompanied by melodies when created musical pieces.
Saint-Saëns: The Carnival of the Animals includes fourteen pieces [and fourteen animals]:I - L'Introduction et marche royale du Lion [LION]II - Poules et coqs [HENS AND ROOSTERS]III - Hémiones [ASIATIC WILD ASS (DONKEY)]IV - Tortues [TURTLES]V - L'Eléphant [ELEPHANT]VI - Kangourous [KANGAROOS]VII - Aquarium [VARIOUS SEA CREATURES]VIII - Personnages á longues oreilles (There is a personal joke here, Saint-Saëns here is talking about people he disliked, translated, this title meant People with Long Ears. (Think about animals with long ears, Donkeys, think about another name for donkeys, Jackasses.))IX - Le Coucou au fond des bois [THE CUCKOO IN THE WOODS]X - Voliéres [AVIARY (BIRDS)]XI - Pianistes [PIANISTS]XII - Fossiles [FOSSILS] (Another analogy, hereSaint-Saëns quotes several "fossils" in music for his time, including his own Danse Macabre)XIII - Le Cygne [SWAN]XIV - Finale [Where we hear from all of the animals in The Carnival of the Animals. This concludes with six brays from the "people with long ears"]
Both are large-scale orchestral pieces by romantic slavic composers. They are similar, but not very.
decomposed pieces of animals