Difference between revisions of "Canyon of the Shedu"

From WorldofAsdar
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "The Canyon of the Shedu is named after the shedu who have long since been held to dwell in its rocky crags and caves. The canyon is thought by asdarographers to have...")
 
m
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
[[File:MapCanyonoftheShedu.jpg|thumb|300px|The Canyon of the Shedu is about 80 miles long.  Through the canyon passes the [[Leh-Shelekhumbis River]] from the higher [[Adamantine Mountains]] to the lower [[Susurrant Desert]].]]
 
[[File:MapCanyonoftheShedu.jpg|thumb|300px|The Canyon of the Shedu is about 80 miles long.  Through the canyon passes the [[Leh-Shelekhumbis River]] from the higher [[Adamantine Mountains]] to the lower [[Susurrant Desert]].]]
 +
 +
[[File:SheduTikultiNinurta.jpg|thumb|200px|An artist's depiction of a shedu in stone]]
  
 
=See Also=
 
=See Also=

Revision as of 17:26, 21 November 2015

The Canyon of the Shedu is named after the shedu who have long since been held to dwell in its rocky crags and caves. The canyon is thought by asdarographers to have been carved by the Leh-Shelekhumbis River over countless ages. The canyon and the surrounding highland has been the haunt of hermits and contested between humans and the Adamantine Giants who have dwelt in the Adamantines for thousands of years. The largest settlement in the region is Kishkelumadh which is a center of hamagnostics whose belief and community were established by Jawlaan of Tandhigumi in the twenty third century.

The Canyon of the Shedu is about 80 miles long. Through the canyon passes the Leh-Shelekhumbis River from the higher Adamantine Mountains to the lower Susurrant Desert.
An artist's depiction of a shedu in stone

See Also