Book 13. (1 results) Explorers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
55
These stains extend for pasangs into thassa.
These stains extend for pasangs into Thassa.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #55)
Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
52
Yet I knew that land must be nigh.
6
53
Already, though we were still perhaps thirty or forty pasangs at sea, one could see clearly in the water the traces of inland sediments.
6
54
These would have been washed out to sea from the Kamba and Nyoka rivers.
6
55
These stains extend for pasangs into thassa.
6
56
Closer to shore one could mark clearly the traces of the Kamba to the north and the Nyoka to the south, but, given our present position, we were in the fans of these washes.
6
57
The Kamba, as I may have mentioned, empties directly into thassa; the Nyoka, on the other hand, empties into Schendi harbor, which is the harbor of the port of Schendi, its waters only then moving thence to thassa.
6
58
Kamba, incidentally, is an inland word, not Gorean.
Yet I knew that land must be nigh.
Already, though we were still perhaps thirty or forty pasangs at sea, one could see clearly in the water the traces of inland sediments.
These would have been washed out to sea from the Kamba and Nyoka rivers.
These stains extend for pasangs into thassa.
Closer to shore one could mark clearly the traces of the Kamba to the north and the Nyoka to the south, but, given our present position, we were in the fans of these washes.
The Kamba, as I may have mentioned, empties directly into thassa; the Nyoka, on the other hand, empties into Schendi harbor, which is the harbor of the port of Schendi, its waters only then moving thence to thassa.
Kamba, incidentally, is an inland word, not Gorean.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 6)