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Barracks

The Barracks Settlement
















Barracks Settlement(Pueblo)[]

Pueblos are modern and old communities of Native Americans in the Southwestern United States of America. The first Spanish explorers of the Southwest used this term to describe the communities housed in apartment-like structures built of stone, adobe mud, and other local material. These structures were usually multi-storied buildings surrounding an open plaza.

640px-Timothy H O'Sullivan - Section of South Side of Zuni Pueblo - GEH 197900140050

Barracks Settlement(Pueblo)

They were occupied by hundreds to thousands of Pueblo people, and were only accessible through a ladder able to be lowered only from the inside, thus preventing break-ins and unwanted guests.

Pirori(Puebloan Peoples)[]

Arizona[]

Further information: List of ancient dwellings of Pueblo peoples in Arizona*Hopi Tribe Nevada-Kykotsmovi — Hopi language speakers. Area of present villages settled around 700 AD


Madotsuki's Room(Hopi mythology)

Red,Purple,Yellow,and Green color books.(Tawa-Kachina color)

Pirori(No-Face)[]

2 登場人物

An existence which gave the field to an object like a black shadow.
It cannot speak about language only by pressing out tenuous voice, but there is also no expression.
Although it does not have "itself" but has the power its exerted from a hand by anything, the ground free in it has transformed itself.
黒い影のような物体にお面をつけたような存在。か細い声を搾り出すだけで言葉は話せず表情も無い。「己」を持たず、手からどんなものでも出す力を持つが、それはただの土くれが化けているものに過ぎない。

※the ground free in it has transformed itself.⇒Pirori is made from ground(ground color) and Pirori is No-face


Monoe (Spirit away)

It was kidnaped when monoe was playing hide-and-seek (Disappearance;Spirit away)?

Strange orange creature(Hippocampus)[]

1 Name

A strange orange creature

A strange orange creature(Seahorse)

The earliest description of the ridge running along the floor of the temporal horn of the lateral ventricle comes from the Venetian anatomist Julius Caesar Aranzi (1587), who likened it first to a silkworm and then to a seahorse (Latin: hippocampus from Greek: ἵππος, "horse" and κάμπος, "coiled").

※Seahorse⇒Seahorse (The Barracks Settlement)



The German anatomist Duvernoy (1729), the first to illustrate the structure, also wavered between "seahorse" and "silkworm." "Ram's horn" was proposed by the Danish anatomist Jacob Winsløw in 1732; and a decade later his fellow Parisian, the surgeon de Garengeot, used "cornu Ammonis" - horn of (the ancient Egyptian god) Amun.[3]

※Egyptian god⇒The Widerness(Desert)

Hippocampus and seahorse cropped

Strange orange creature(Hippocampus)


Another mythological reference appeared with the term pes hippocampi, which may date back to Diemerbroeck in 1672, introducing a comparison with the shape of the folded back forelimbs and webbed feet of the Classical hippocampus (Greek: ἱππόκαμπος), a sea monster with a horse's forequarters and a fish's tail. The hippocampus was then described as pes hippocampi major, with an adjacent bulge in the occipital horn, the calcar avis, being named pes hippocampi minor.[3]

Seahorse (The Barracks Settlement) ⇒hippocampi minor

The Widerness(Desert)[]

1.2 Etymology 2

desert (plural deserts)

  1. A barren area of land or desolate terrain, especially one with little water or vegetation; a wasteland.
  2. (figuratively) Any barren place or situation.

The Barracks Settlement(Desert)[]

1.3 Etymology 3

desert (third-person singular simple present deserts, present participle deserting, simple past and past participle deserted)

  1. To leave (anything that depends on one's presence to survive, exist, or succeed), especially when contrary to a promise or obligation; to abandon; to forsake.
    You can't just drive off and desert me here, in the middle of nowhere.
  2. To leave one's duty or post, especially to leave a military or naval unit without permission.
    Anyone found deserting will be shot.
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