x: y:
여기에는 물고기가없는 것 같다
024 Hhusatahwi
Situated near the Tuliyollal Trailhead, this settlement was originally built as a supply depot to facilitate the exploration and development of the Shaaloani wilderness. As time passed, however, a new saloon and other entertainments drew in the local ceruleum miners, and within a few short years, the depot has become a thriving trading post.
Situated near the Tuliyollal Trailhead, this settlement was originally built as a supply depot to facilitate the exploration and development of the Shaaloani wilderness. As time passed, however, a new saloon and other entertainments drew in the local ceruleum miners, and within a few short years, the depot has become a thriving trading post.
025 Mehwahhetsoan
This village is home to a family of Hhetsarro who have taken the rroneek as their guiding animal. As the name implies, “the land where the hhetso graze” is a nomadic settlement, the tents struck and pitched over and over as they follow the seasonal migration of the rroneek.
This village is home to a family of Hhetsarro who have taken the rroneek as their guiding animal. As the name implies, “the land where the hhetso graze” is a nomadic settlement, the tents struck and pitched over and over as they follow the seasonal migration of the rroneek.
026 Lake Toari
Just like water, the moments which make up life rush past in the blink of an eye. In recognition of this truth, the Hhetsarro have given the river which runs through Shaaloani the name “Niikwerepi”─the swift current of time. The two lakes into which it flows are in turn named after the morning and the evening, with Lake Toari alluding to the former.
Just like water, the moments which make up life rush past in the blink of an eye. In recognition of this truth, the Hhetsarro have given the river which runs through Shaaloani the name “Niikwerepi”─the swift current of time. The two lakes into which it flows are in turn named after the morning and the evening, with Lake Toari alluding to the former.
027 Pyaayehe'pya
Named in the Shetona language, the “hill of many wings” has been the nesting grounds of the yeheheceyaa since time immemorial. The many fossils discovered in the region are evidence of their ancient existence, while the shrill cries of their newly hatched offspring herald their ongoing presence.
Named in the Shetona language, the “hill of many wings” has been the nesting grounds of the yeheheceyaa since time immemorial. The many fossils discovered in the region are evidence of their ancient existence, while the shrill cries of their newly hatched offspring herald their ongoing presence.
028 Mount Loazensasaya
The ancestors of the Tonawawta are said to have stood atop this rocky plateau, puffing on rolled tobacco as they communed with the wind and the land. From this natural vantage point, one can see clear across Shaaloani to Zorgor the Boundless.
The ancestors of the Tonawawta are said to have stood atop this rocky plateau, puffing on rolled tobacco as they communed with the wind and the land. From this natural vantage point, one can see clear across Shaaloani to Zorgor the Boundless.