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Darkheyr
Learned Scribe
264 Posts |
Posted - 03 Sep 2014 : 11:30:03
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Greetings scribes,
Our NWN project is currently reworking some areas to bring them a bit closer to the actual setting, and some discrepancies have turned up.
Our areas include part of the western Anauroch, specifically the so-called Frozen Sea. What we're unsure about is how that area actually looks. Numerous sources speak of "frozen sand dunes" and ice, others simply of sand. The old Elminster's Ecology Anauroch booklet even mentions said frozen dunes first, and later on claims that a modern traveller wouldn't find any actual water or ice there.
Anyone know something else pertaining to the 3E era?
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silm.pw - A Neverwinter Nights Persistent World |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6369 Posts |
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Darkheyr
Learned Scribe
264 Posts |
Posted - 03 Sep 2014 : 14:21:35
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I'm aware of the difference between the high ice and the frozen sea. As said, sources just seem to be inprecise and even contradictory concerning the Frozen Sea.
I found the water-from-Graypeaks-bit, but even then... When would it be frozen? I mean, apparently it's still a waterless, hot desert according Elminster's Ecologies, and any water running down there would be unlikely to freeze, except maybe at night. |
silm.pw - A Neverwinter Nights Persistent World |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6369 Posts |
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xaeyruudh
Master of Realmslore
USA
1853 Posts |
Posted - 03 Sep 2014 : 16:44:15
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The following is all my take on it.
There were effectively two Narrow Seas. The Frozen Sea on the 2e Anauroch map corresponds to the ancient north-south Narrow Sea, which was diverted by magic during the fall of Isstossefifil circa -30,000 DR.
By the time Netheril was founded, that original Narrow Sea was long gone. So far gone that the sarrukh's settlements had fallen to rubble and been buried by time. (I suspect that the Netherese never even discovered Oreme, as evidenced by its absence from the Netheril maps.) The Narrow Sea was east-west at that point, and following the fall of Netheril it was completely covered/absorbed by the High Ice.
There's also the matter of the phaerimm lifedrain spells. The Sword (the southern, sandy, hot part of the desert) is still splotched with lifedrains circa 1357. This causes an extremely inhospitable lack of humidity, and the accompanying lack of cloud cover and precipitation, which makes this area very hot and dry.
The Plain of Standing Stones is higher ground, blasted clear of sand by constant winds. (FR13 p59) There's slightly more moisture here, but only in areas that are sheltered from the wind and sun.
The modern "Frozen Sea" is part of the Sword. It's sandy and suffers a near-total lack of moisture. So "frozen" can only refer to temperature. For some reason it's cold here even though it's hot in the southern part of the Sword. In my game, the runoff from the Graypeaks will vanish once it reaches the sand.
I suspect the reason for the cold temperatures in the Frozen Sea (which should still be significantly warmer during the day) is a combination of the geographical features. First, the fact that it was once a sea means that it's probably a giant gully, so the whole Frozen Sea should be lower elevation than the Sword, which is lower than the Plain of Standing Stones, which is lower than the High Ice. The cold air from the whole western wall of the High Ice drops into the Frozen Sea, and stays there, hemmed in by the Gray Peaks and the Fallen Lands, the Nether Mountains, and the mountains up by Ascore. Due to the lower elevation, the wind that blasts the High Ice and the Plain passes high over the Frozen Sea without blowing the cold air out.
I would describe the Frozen Sea as a typical sandy desert, but cool (60-70 F) during the day and very chilly (10-20 F) at night... at the south end. Up by the High Ice it's probably 20-30 during the day and maybe -20 F at night.
Again, just my impressions. |
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Rymac
Learned Scribe
USA
315 Posts |
Posted - 07 Sep 2014 : 05:48:34
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quote: Originally posted by xaeyruudh
There were effectively two Narrow Seas. The Frozen Sea on the 2e Anauroch map corresponds to the ancient north-south Narrow Sea, which was diverted by magic during the fall of Isstossefifil circa -30,000 DR.
I was trying to find an image online from page 6 of The Grand History of the Realms. (I'd rather not run afoul of scanning it and violating copyright.) There are, depending upon how one counts, five to seven small seas that will eventually make up the Sea of Fallen Stars. The "Sembia-Cormyr" sea has a connecting river that runs north, then eventually widens into the Narrow Sea.
After the redirecting of the Narrow Sea by the Sarrukh, what remained of this river system became the Farsea Marshes, the Marsh of Tun, and the Tun River.
Updated: Found a picture at the Forgotten Realms wiki, specifically at the Days of Thunder overview <http://forgottenrealms.wikia.com/wiki/Days_of_Thunder_overview>. The direct link to the picture is <http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20140315091744/forgottenrealms/images/7/75/Pic_11.jpg>. Where the word "Boitumelo" is placed is the original location of the Narrow Sea. |
Edited by - Rymac on 08 Sep 2014 07:02:43 |
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