Some people have a mental horizon of radius zero and call it their point of view. David Hilbert
Ian STEWART
Home
News
What's Happening
Personal
>
Euler Book Prize
BSJ Award
WORLDCON
Sir Terry Pratchett
Sir Christopher Zeeman
Tim Poston
Jack Cohen
Books
Recent
eBOOKS
Popular
>
Mathematics
Science
Science Fiction
Technical
>
Undergraduate
Research
Reviews
Research
Books
Papers
>
Algebra
Singularities + Bifurcation
Dynamics (pure)
Dynamics (applied)
Networks
Biomathematics
Wire + Springs
Other
Goodies
iPad App
Qish
>
Qish_atlas
Qish_timeline
Qish_gazetteer
Manifold Magazine
>
MANIFOLD 1
MANIFOLD 2
MANIFOLD 3
MANIFOLD 4
MANIFOLD 5
MANIFOLD 6
MANIFOLD 7
MANIFOLD 8
MANIFOLD 9
MANIFOLD 10
MANIFOLD 11
MANIFOLD 12
MANIFOLD 13
MANIFOLD 14
MANIFOLD 15
MANIFOLD 16
MANIFOLD 17
MANIFOLD 18
MANIFOLD 19
MANIFOLD 20
Math of Discworld
>
DW Mathematicians
Guild of Mathematicians
Light on DW
Relativism
Unified Relativism
Gods of Math
Orangutan/Human
Pachydermodynamics
DW Math Books
DW Equations
Math at UU
Orbital Mechanics
Astrozoology
Chaos Theory
Quantum
Articles
Blogs
Interviews
Reports
Podcasts and Video
Radio + Audio
Music
Links
>
Resources
Math Sites
Equations
Quotes
About
Biography
Amazon author page
Gallery
Contact
ATLAS of QISH
View from space
Tectonic geology
The four continents
Shaaluy
Samdal
Lamynt
Wevory
The planet Qish, viewed from space, with the provisional names that Valkyrie's crew assigned to the continents
Tectonic geology of Qish
Map of one hemisphere of Qish, with four continents. The other hemisphere is almost entirely ocean
The continent of Shaaluy
The continent of Samdal
The continent of Lamynt
The continent of Wevory
The Lamynt-Wevory war