Sand: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>SilverSunbird m disambig |
imported>PastaBot m Template fixes |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
{{Otheruses}} | {{Otheruses}} | ||
{{Nickname}} | {{Nickname}} | ||
{{Quote|There's a colony of living, eating sand all along the shoreline…|Tinian I'att describes the coastlines of Lomabu III|<ref name="The Prize Pelt: The Tale of Bossk"> | {{Quote|There's a colony of living, eating sand all along the shoreline…|Tinian I'att describes the coastlines of Lomabu III|<ref name="The Prize Pelt: The Tale of Bossk">{{Shortstory|story=The Prize Pelt: The Tale of Bossk|book=Tales of the Bounty Hunters}}</ref>}} | ||
'''Sand''' was a creature native to the mostly [[Water/Legends|aquatic]] [[Planet/Legends|world]] of [[Lomabu III]] that colonized the planet's shorelines like its inorganic namesake. Crossing an area of the living sand was impossible on foot without a being becoming its next meal, as the near microscopic creatures were capable of eating through nearly any substance almost instantaneously. In this manner, it was much like [[carnivorous mold]]. | '''Sand''' was a creature native to the mostly [[Water/Legends|aquatic]] [[Planet/Legends|world]] of [[Lomabu III]] that colonized the planet's shorelines like its inorganic namesake. Crossing an area of the living sand was impossible on foot without a being becoming its next meal, as the near microscopic creatures were capable of eating through nearly any substance almost instantaneously. In this manner, it was much like [[carnivorous mold]]. | ||
==Appearances== | ==Appearances== | ||
* | *{{Shortstory|story=The Prize Pelt: The Tale of Bossk|book=Tales of the Bounty Hunters}} | ||
==Notes and references== | ==Notes and references== |
Latest revision as of 01:36, 26 August 2022
- "There's a colony of living, eating sand all along the shoreline…"
- ―Tinian I'att describes the coastlines of Lomabu III
Sand was a creature native to the mostly aquatic world of Lomabu III that colonized the planet's shorelines like its inorganic namesake. Crossing an area of the living sand was impossible on foot without a being becoming its next meal, as the near microscopic creatures were capable of eating through nearly any substance almost instantaneously. In this manner, it was much like carnivorous mold.