Everglades
Along the coastline remains dozens of white sandy stretches and soft-ground sandy isles, where the ocean tide meets with freshwater streams and rivers further inland, and the land remains a sandy silt-deposited and muddy, filled with rotting vegetation until reaching further inland where the swamp transitions from saltwater to freshwater regions. Calling the region the Everglades. It is very easy to get lost in these regions, to be surprised by flesh-eating snapper-fish, gators and marine dinosaurs that call this region home. Bordered by the Lonehorn Peninsula in the northwest, to the north and east sides the Dredjericho Jungle, and further south east the coast thickens to longer stretches of beaches and harder rocky ground and cliffs known as the "Bleaker Cliffs". One strange region, followed from the south-western point, is a flood-land that submerges and reappears seasonally and gives way to a landscape in the drier seasons, leading inland where it appears coastal rockpools gather, sandy dunes and coral forests seem to grow within the swampy waters - leading to the Tortle settlements and Carpe Tortollan. This region of the Everglades is referred to as the Combing Creeks.
Type
Wetland / Swamp