Murkwood Highlands
Murkwood Highlands
| — Survey Logs — | |
|---|---|
| Classification | Forested highland region |
| Mapping | Eastern Gondara |
| The Wilds | Folded highlands with continuous forest cover and enclosed valleys |
| Atmosphere | Humid, fog-prone, low-visibility environment |
| — Landmark Discoveries — | |
| Waters | Red River, internal streams |
| Marvels | Murkwood Mountain System |
| Presence | Sparse; corridor-based only |
|
Strategic Value: | |
Murkwood Highlands
The Murkwood Highlands form the eastern enclosed highland region of Gondara, representing the surface terrain of the Murkwood Mountain System. The region is defined by continuous forest coverage, folded terrain, and restricted movement.
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Regional Structure
The Murkwood Highlands are not a single continuous ridge, but a broad highland mass composed of layered ridgelines and enclosed valleys.
The region can be divided into three functional zones:
- Western Transition Belt — gradual descent toward the Red River; thinning forest and wider valleys
- Central Highlands — densest terrain; overlapping ridges, minimal visibility, no direct routes
- Eastern Slopes — descending terrain toward the coast; steeper gradients and broken ridgelines
These zones define movement, settlement potential, and environmental conditions.
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Terrain Constraints
Terrain across the Murkwood Highlands is continuous and irregular:
- No large flat regions
- Constant elevation change (ascending/descending terrain)
- Narrow valleys and limited crossing points
- Ridgelines that disrupt direct travel
Movement is terrain-driven rather than distance-driven.
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Forest Coverage
Forest is continuous across nearly all elevations:
- Dense hardwood canopy dominates all zones
- Minimal open ground outside river corridors
- Reduced coverage only on exposed ridgelines
The forest obscures terrain structure and limits visibility across the region.
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Hydrology
The region contains numerous small drainage systems:
- Streams follow valley lines and fold structures
- No central river dominates the highlands
- Water flow trends west toward the Red River
River corridors represent the only consistent natural breaks in terrain.
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Movement Corridors
Large-scale movement is restricted to limited corridors:
- Western descent routes toward the Red River
- Northern access through the Tamaron Gap
- Isolated ridge crossings within the interior
No continuous east–west route exists across the region.
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Settlement Patterns
Settlement within the Murkwood Highlands is constrained by terrain and visibility.
- Viable settlement types:
- River-edge settlements (western boundary)
- Ridge-based strongholds (limited, strategic positions)
- Gap and corridor settlements (near Tamaron Gap)
- Placeholder structure (expand later):
- Colonial settlements: TBD
- Tribal regions: TBD
- 1930 settlements: TBD
Large urban development is not supported within the central highlands.
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Strategic Significance
The Murkwood Highlands function as a natural barrier:
- Limits east–west movement across Gondara
- Isolates eastern coastal access from interior regions
- Restricts military and logistical operations
- Provides concealment due to terrain and forest density
Control of entry points (river crossings and gaps) is critical.
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