The Yeti
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- Pronouns
- He/Him

The World Database provides basic intelligence on the nations of Eras.
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Prehistoric and Ancient Kyowara
先史時代と古代
The first hunter-gatherers are believed to have reached the Kyonese territories during the Paleolithic period, with the earliest traces of human activity dating back approximately 38,000 to 40,000 years. Due to the highly acidic nature of Kyowara’s soil, few skeletal remains have survived from this era. Nevertheless, the unearthing of distinctive edge-ground stone axes, dated to over 30,000 years ago, is thought to mark the arrival of early Homo sapiens in the region. It is widely accepted that these pioneering peoples traversed the seas to Kyowara using primitive watercraft from what is today known as Skanda. Archaeological evidence from Inoto Cave in Kaito, dated to around 32,000 years ago, and from Eikowa Nobibaru Cave on Daijima Island, dated to approximately 20,000 years ago, further attests to early human settlement. Moreover, there is compelling evidence that Kyowara’s Paleolithic inhabitants engaged with and hunted now-extinct species of megafauna, including the mammoths (Mammuthus primigenius) and and extinct species of large birds named Tukais (Raphus tucaicatus). Eruptions of Daichi and Suro calderas caused the southern parts of Kyowara to be uninhabitable for 800 years.