Difference between revisions of "Stone Forest"
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Bordering the Lhitsu upon the [[Drauger]] Plane is the '''Stone Forest''', a dead woodland, a graveyard of Nature. Abandoned by whatever force of light and life might once have resided within its blighted confines, roaming the length and breadth of the aptly-named Stone Forest are the insectoid treemites. A scourge upon the plane, believed by some to have devoured worlds in their mindless quest to expand and consume, these bug-like creatures are endlessly hunted by the [[sharn]] to supply their village and forestall their inevitable expansion. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
The Stone Forest was discovered by [[Achaean]] [[adventurers]] in 758 AF, when interplanar pathways through [[Yggdrasil]] became open after the escape of [[Pazuzu]] from the [[Prime Material Plane]]. | |||
==Flora and Fauna== | |||
Treemites of all varieties: greater xietals, greater hormids, greater caterpins, greater mantises, and lesser treemites in every colour of the rainbow infest the skeletal boughs. Very little plant-life survives in cadaverous wood, consumed by the unyielding hunger of the insectal legions. | |||
[[Category:Forests]] | |||
[[Category: |
Revision as of 06:38, 7 December 2017
Bordering the Lhitsu upon the Drauger Plane is the Stone Forest, a dead woodland, a graveyard of Nature. Abandoned by whatever force of light and life might once have resided within its blighted confines, roaming the length and breadth of the aptly-named Stone Forest are the insectoid treemites. A scourge upon the plane, believed by some to have devoured worlds in their mindless quest to expand and consume, these bug-like creatures are endlessly hunted by the sharn to supply their village and forestall their inevitable expansion.
History
The Stone Forest was discovered by Achaean adventurers in 758 AF, when interplanar pathways through Yggdrasil became open after the escape of Pazuzu from the Prime Material Plane.
Flora and Fauna
Treemites of all varieties: greater xietals, greater hormids, greater caterpins, greater mantises, and lesser treemites in every colour of the rainbow infest the skeletal boughs. Very little plant-life survives in cadaverous wood, consumed by the unyielding hunger of the insectal legions.