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Sterday, 29 Astron
Gallery - STILL A THING TO FIX
Smaug in the 1977 film The Hobbit
Smaug in the 2003 video game The Hobbit
Smaug in Adaptations | |||||||||
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Reference thing
It is unclear what the borders of Eriador were to the south; it is unknown whether the Greyflood or Lune rivers even existed in the First Age. Presumably the Greyflood followed the same route through Eriador to the lower end of the extended Blue Mountains - before reaching the sea somewhere to the west of the White Mountains.[1]:4
Central Eriador was scattered with many groups of hills including the Tower Hills (Emyn Beraid), Hills of Evendim (Emyn Uial), Weather Hills as well as the Far Downs, White Downs, South Downs, North Downs and Barrow-downs (Tyrn Gorthad); Fonstad noted that the "longitudinal axes [of the hills] formed concentric rings".[1](this thing should be in brackets) Despite large deforestation by the Númenóreans during the Second Age some wooded areas remained, such as the Old Forest, Woody End, Bindbole Wood (sometimes seen as "Bindbale"), Chetwood around Bree-hill, the Trollshaws, and, largest of all, Eryn Vorn; Hollin was so named due to the large numbers of holly trees which grew there.[1] Other geographic features include Midgewater Marshes, Rushock Bog, and Overbourn Marshes.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Karen Wynn Fonstad, The Atlas of Middle-earth, revised edition