Inamun Orbital Dossier
Inamun circles the blue-white sun Zumur while distant Anara hangs as a second star on the edge of every argument. Three visible moons shape tides, labor, and ritual; a fourth remains disputed.
Worlds for explorers, writers, and wonderers.Atlas / Transmission 01
World events
Inamun circles the blue-white sun Zumur while distant Anara hangs as a second star on the edge of every argument. Three visible moons shape tides, labor, and ritual; a fourth remains disputed.
The oldest surviving Inamun sky-cycle links eclipse terror, tidal retreat, and survival memory into one ritual tradition: climb to the Kutala Hills, drum through the darkfall, and wait for light.
Refugees from Anara arrived as saviors, scientists, and future colonizers all at once. They ended the reign of the Ulmatapu and replaced it with moon-mines, transit corridors, and a rigid hierarchy.
Alyra, the first native astrophysicist trusted with the Zishara mission, discovers that the equations needed to save the probe may be hidden inside a story her grandmother taught her as a child.
A disputed orbital model argues that Ninara is not a fantasy moon but a dim captured body in a long, inclined outer orbit. Accepting it would force both Umari astronomy and indigenous prophecy to revise themselves.