About: Kamelands   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The Kamelands lie along the eastern edge of the Stolen Lands. Characterized by rolling hills of brown and yellow, the landscape is notable for its many rocky mounds known as kames. Grasses in the Kamelands grow quite tall—sometimes up to 4 feet—and present a difficult barrier to both travel and settlement in the region. Among the high grass and rocky hills rise the mysterious kames, mounds of ancient stone and debris. The kames together form great, strange patterns, suggesting waymarkers, barrows, and long-destroyed walls and foundations.

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  • Kamelands
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  • The Kamelands lie along the eastern edge of the Stolen Lands. Characterized by rolling hills of brown and yellow, the landscape is notable for its many rocky mounds known as kames. Grasses in the Kamelands grow quite tall—sometimes up to 4 feet—and present a difficult barrier to both travel and settlement in the region. Among the high grass and rocky hills rise the mysterious kames, mounds of ancient stone and debris. The kames together form great, strange patterns, suggesting waymarkers, barrows, and long-destroyed walls and foundations.
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dbkwik:pathfinder/...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • The Kamelands lie along the eastern edge of the Stolen Lands. Characterized by rolling hills of brown and yellow, the landscape is notable for its many rocky mounds known as kames. Grasses in the Kamelands grow quite tall—sometimes up to 4 feet—and present a difficult barrier to both travel and settlement in the region. Among the high grass and rocky hills rise the mysterious kames, mounds of ancient stone and debris. The kames together form great, strange patterns, suggesting waymarkers, barrows, and long-destroyed walls and foundations. Very few animals live in the Kamelands; its rare occupants include rodents, snakes, foxes, hares, and wolves. Wyverns are known to fly over the region, and boars, bears, and even owlbears sometimes travel in from the forests to the west. Horses of the region are much valued (and highly expensive) for their strength, speed, and surefootedness.
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