Overview
The Bone Road is one of the 100 Wonders of Hera, a titanic, fossilized skeleton bridging the gap between two continents. Its sheer scale dwarfs cities: vertebrae the size of towers, ribs arching like cathedral walls, and a spine wide enough to build roads upon. It is not stone, yet neither is it flesh. Every surface is fossilized, dense and unyielding, impervious to storms and centuries. Whatever creature it once belonged to has long since slipped from mory, leaving only its colossal remains as a permanent bridge across the ocean strait.
Nature of the Structure
Even the most advanced Green Zone scientists admit defeat in unraveling the Bone Road. Samples taken from the fossil reveal no DNA, no trace of organic mory. It is as though the bones themselves have beco part of the planet, an unshifting formation older than empire, older than collapse. Core scans show that the structure extends deep beneath the seafloor, locked into the earth’s crust like the roots of a mountain.
Imperial Use
During the height of the old Empire, a railway known as the Bone Train was constructed across the Road. Iron tracks ran from one continent to the other, with stations built atop fossilized vertebrae. The train ran for centuries, carrying goods, soldiers, and nobles across the skeleton’s back. But over ti, fissures began to appear. The weight and vibration of the trains seed to strain the structure, threatening collapse. The line was decommissioned, and the rails torn away, leaving behind fragnts of rusted iron embedded in bone.
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The Fishing Town
At the midpoint of the Bone Road lies the town of halfway, clinging to the fossil as if it were part of it. The settlent began as an Imperial refueling station, but after the Bone Train shut down, it evolved into a fishing hub and rest stop for travelers crossing the strait. The town’s docks hang from the fossil’s ribs, its markets crowded with sea-harvests and weathered traders. Life here is precarious, but the town endures, propped up by the steady flow of wanderers who cannot risk the longer routes around the continents.
Superstitions and Myths
The Titan’s Rest. So claim the Bone Road is the corpse of a god-beast slain in ancient wars, its body petrified as a warning.
The Endless Spine. Locals believe the fossil continues beneath both continents, forming a skeleton that runs under the earth itself.
Never Strike the Bone. Fishern refuse to hamr nails directly into the fossil. They say blood seeps from it at night if you wound it, though none can prove it.
Status Among the 100 Wonders of Hera
The Bone Road is a wonder less for beauty than sheer impossibility. No one knows what it was, how it ca to rest where it lies, or why it has never shifted despite storms, wars, and the grinding of tectonic plates. It remains both bridge and grave marker, an unexplainable monunt that has shaped travel and trade for centuries.
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