ID #11302173
This wolf is currently nursing at least one puppy! She will wean her offspring in 3 rollovers!
Currents | |
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Age | 1 year 10½ months (Adult) |
Sex | Female |
Energy |
|
Mood |
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Hunger |
|
HP |
|
Personality | Bossy |
Breeding Information | |
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Age in Rollovers | 45 |
Pups Bred | 5 pups bred |
Last Bred | 6 days ago |
Fertility | Good |
Heat Cycle | On Cooldown |
Items Applied | None! |
Pair Bond |
None
|
Looks | |
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Base | Pyrope (0.27%) |
Base Genetics | Warm Dark III |
Eyes | Blue |
Skin | Verdigris |
Nose | Noctiluca |
Claws | Penumbral |
Mutation | None |
Secondary Mutation | None |
Carrier Status | Unknown |
Variant | Default |
Markings
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Slot 1 | Abomination Wild Stripes (60% : T3) |
Slot 2 | None |
Slot 3 | None |
Slot 4 | Hydrangea Lupos (15% : T3) |
Slot 5 | None |
Slot 6 | None |
Slot 7 | Hydrangea Peacock (17% : T3) |
Slot 8 | Black Inverted Cross (41% : T1) |
Slot 9 | None |
Slot 10 | None |
Biography
About the Star
Beta Lyrae is a double star system. It has an apparent magnitude of 3.52 and is approximately 960 light years distant from Earth. It has the traditional name Sheliak, derived from šiliyāq, which is the Arabic name for the constellation.
The Beta Lyrae system has a variable luminosity, ranging from 3.4 to 4.3 magnitudes. The variability was first discovered by the British astronomer John Goodricke in 1784. The components are so close together that they form a spectroscopic binary star, one that cannot be resolved into individual components with optical telescopes. The two orbit each other with a period of 12.9414 days and periodically eclipse each other. As a result, their apparent magnitude varies.
The primary star has the stellar classification of B7II – it is a blue-white bright giant. The secondary component is also believed to be a class B star.
The system is a semidetached binary, one in which one of the stars fills the binary star's Roche lobe, and the other star does not. Gas from the surface of the donor star is transferred to the accreting star, and the transfer of mass dominates the system's evolution. The B7II star, now the less massive component, was once the more massive component in the system. As is evolved into a giant, it transferred most of its mass to the other star, as the two are in close orbit. As a result, the other star is now surrounded by an accretion disk, one that makes it difficult to pinpoint the star's exact stellar type.
Lyra myth
Lyra represents the lyre of Orpheus, the musician and poet in Greek mythology who met his end at the hands of the Bacchantes. When he passed, his lyre was thrown into a river. Zeus sent an eagle to get the lyre and placed both of them in the sky.
Orpheus was the son of the Thracian King Oeagrus and the muse Calliope. When he was young, god Apollo gave him a golden lyre and taught him to play it, and his mother taught him to write verses.
Orpheus was known for his ability to charm even stones with his music, for his attempts to save his wife Eurydice from the underworld, and for being the harpist and companion of Jason and the Argonauts.
Without Orpheus and his music, the Argonauts would not have been able to make it past the Sirens, whose song enticed sailors to come to them, which usually resulted in sailors crashing their ships into the islands on which the Sirens lived. When the Argonauts approached the islands, Orpheus drew his lyre and played music that drowned out the Sirens' calls.
The most famous story involving Orpheus is that of the passing of his wife Eurydice. Eurydice was trying to escape a satyr at her wedding, and fell into a nest of vipers. She was bitten on the heel. Orpheus found the body and, deeply shaken, he played songs that made the gods and the nymphs cry. The gods felt pity for him and advised him to travel to the underworld and try to retrieve Eurydice. Orpheus took their advice. Once there, his song deeply moved Hades and his wife Persephone and they agreed to return Eurydice to the world of the living on one condition: Orpheus should walk in front of her and not look back until they both had reached the upper world. Orpheus and Eurydice started walking and, as much as he wanted to, he did not look back. However, he forgot that they both had to arrive to the upper world before he could turn. As soon as he reached it, he turned around, but Eurydice was not quite there yet and she disappeared from his sight, for good this time.
Orpheus met his end at the hands of Thracian Maenads, who ripped him to shreds for not honouring Dionysus. His lyre was carried to heaven by the Muses, who also collected the fragments of his body and buried them below Mount Olympus.
Lyra constellation was often depicted as a vulture or an eagle carrying Orpheus' lyre in its wings or beak, and called Aquila Cadens or Vultur Cadens, which means "the falling eagle" or "falling vulture."
In Wales, the constellation is known as King Arthur's Harp (Talyn Arthur) or King David's Harp.
The Beta Lyrae system has a variable luminosity, ranging from 3.4 to 4.3 magnitudes. The variability was first discovered by the British astronomer John Goodricke in 1784. The components are so close together that they form a spectroscopic binary star, one that cannot be resolved into individual components with optical telescopes. The two orbit each other with a period of 12.9414 days and periodically eclipse each other. As a result, their apparent magnitude varies.
The primary star has the stellar classification of B7II – it is a blue-white bright giant. The secondary component is also believed to be a class B star.
The system is a semidetached binary, one in which one of the stars fills the binary star's Roche lobe, and the other star does not. Gas from the surface of the donor star is transferred to the accreting star, and the transfer of mass dominates the system's evolution. The B7II star, now the less massive component, was once the more massive component in the system. As is evolved into a giant, it transferred most of its mass to the other star, as the two are in close orbit. As a result, the other star is now surrounded by an accretion disk, one that makes it difficult to pinpoint the star's exact stellar type.
Lyra myth
Orpheus was the son of the Thracian King Oeagrus and the muse Calliope. When he was young, god Apollo gave him a golden lyre and taught him to play it, and his mother taught him to write verses.
Orpheus was known for his ability to charm even stones with his music, for his attempts to save his wife Eurydice from the underworld, and for being the harpist and companion of Jason and the Argonauts.
Without Orpheus and his music, the Argonauts would not have been able to make it past the Sirens, whose song enticed sailors to come to them, which usually resulted in sailors crashing their ships into the islands on which the Sirens lived. When the Argonauts approached the islands, Orpheus drew his lyre and played music that drowned out the Sirens' calls.
The most famous story involving Orpheus is that of the passing of his wife Eurydice. Eurydice was trying to escape a satyr at her wedding, and fell into a nest of vipers. She was bitten on the heel. Orpheus found the body and, deeply shaken, he played songs that made the gods and the nymphs cry. The gods felt pity for him and advised him to travel to the underworld and try to retrieve Eurydice. Orpheus took their advice. Once there, his song deeply moved Hades and his wife Persephone and they agreed to return Eurydice to the world of the living on one condition: Orpheus should walk in front of her and not look back until they both had reached the upper world. Orpheus and Eurydice started walking and, as much as he wanted to, he did not look back. However, he forgot that they both had to arrive to the upper world before he could turn. As soon as he reached it, he turned around, but Eurydice was not quite there yet and she disappeared from his sight, for good this time.
Orpheus met his end at the hands of Thracian Maenads, who ripped him to shreds for not honouring Dionysus. His lyre was carried to heaven by the Muses, who also collected the fragments of his body and buried them below Mount Olympus.
Lyra constellation was often depicted as a vulture or an eagle carrying Orpheus' lyre in its wings or beak, and called Aquila Cadens or Vultur Cadens, which means "the falling eagle" or "falling vulture."
In Wales, the constellation is known as King Arthur's Harp (Talyn Arthur) or King David's Harp.
Birth Stats | ||
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Strength | Speed | Agility |
84 | 93 | 86 |
Wisdom | Smarts | Total |
90 | 75 | 428 |
Birth Information | |
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Moon | Waxing Crescent Moon |
Season | Autumn |
Biome | Prairie |
Decorations and Background |
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Background
None equippedDecorations
Above
None equipped!
Below
None equipped!
Currently
No Role!
Proficiency | |
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Hunting: Stalking | |
Hunting: Chasing | |
Hunting: Finishing | |
Scouting | |
Herbalism | |
Pupsitting |
Statistic | Count |
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Total Number of Scouts | 0 |
Total Number of Hunts | 1 |
Successful Hunts | 1 |
Total Number of Lessons Taught | 0 |
This wolf is nursing the following puppies... | ||
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Pyrope 1 | Male | Father: Alsnotr Vega |
New Puppy | Male | Father: Alsnotr Vega |
Pyrope 3 | Female | Father: Alsnotr Vega |
Pyrope 2 | Female | Father: Alsnotr Vega |
New Puppy | Male | Father: Alsnotr Vega |
In current pack for 25 rollovers
Wolf created on 2024-11-01 15:14:05