The Most Photographed Stone East of the Mississippi
Very near the Soudan Underground State Park administered by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources is what some people call âthe most photographed outcrop in the state.â This is a pavement outcrop of folded banded iron formation. The outcrop consists of metallic hematite, red jasper and white chert. These originally horizontal layers have been folded multiple times. In some areas, the jasper and chert have fractures filled with milky quartz.
Old picture, not entirely sure of which species this is meant to be.
Assuming either Nightstalker or Wrightsâ Dragon.
Koinonia cavumâNightstalker. A hive-mind species, each blaze is generally less than 10 members. Primarily nocturnal, they have yellow eyes and scales are dark and matte. Despite being nocturnal, their eyes are not particularly good at detail. Instead, they have large, sensitive ears, and their prominent facial ridges protect infrared-sensing pits that they use to hunt. Group structures and placement are generally more structured than Pigeon Dragons, with each member having a set of general duties. Their fire is shot in quick, explosive bursts so their visibility is interrupted for the shortest possible time.
[Koinonia insert]âWrightsâ Dragons. Cousins of Nightstalkers, these forest-colored blazes (3-7 members) hold a similar ecological niche to foxes and coyotes, and often bond with them. (What you would think of as the âtypical forest dragon.â)
Draco bisonâThunder Dragon. Generally lightly colored. They have no hoards and do not breathe fire. Instead, packs, called thunders migrate with their prey, the bison, picking off and attempting to poison the weak from the herds. Their wings are generally vulnerable to a bisonâs bulk or horns, and sometimes fight amongst themselves. They will often bond with human hunters of the plains. They lay their leathery eggs in the winter and they hatch in the spring after their first year. Social communication, instead of being at infrasonic levels, is, instead, ultrasonic.
[insert insert] â Snaps/Snap Dragon. Small, insectivorous dragons (2-3 in.). Males turn bright colors (reds, pinks, purplesâeven orangeâdepending on locality) during mating season. Create small sparks to disable prey, and they get their name from the snapping sound they make when creating sparks.
[insert insert] â Cave Wyrm. Their fire melts rock.
[insert insert]âHorned Serpent. Cousins of sea serpents, a variety of subspecies have been recorded in the Central Continent, dwelling in freshwater lakes and rivers. Though they sometimes hunt fish, they primarily prey upon unlucky boaters or animals that come to the edges of their lake. Their scales come in a variety of colors, and they have a diamond-shaped gem set into their foreheads, which allows them to recall with perfect clarity what was and divine what could be. They use this skill in hunting and defense, predicting where their prey is most likely to be and avoiding their opponentâs strikes. Their scales also have similar, but lesser, divining properties. Their name comes from the deer-like horns upon their heads. Any being to which they bond turns into a horned serpent themselves, and is able to bond with another being themselves; colonies of horned serpents have been recorded to have up to [six / seven] serpents bonded to each other at a time. They are susceptible to electricity, and their greatest enemies are the Thunderbirds, who attack them on sight.