The Oubinga River has its source at Zura’s Mouth, a series of pools and springs deep within the jungles of the Kaava Lands. It is fed by numerous sketchily-mapped tributaries, and enters the sea at the north west edge of Desperation Bay.
Zura’s Mouth is a holy site, here local tribes carry out ritual sacrifice by drowning. The bodies, and anything else rash enough to enter the river here, are eaten by schools of carnivorous fish. The regular food supply, and the downstream cataracts, keep most of the deadly fish in the Zura’s Mouth area – but not all of them.[1]
References[]
- ↑ Tim Hitchcock et al. (2010). Heart of the Jungle, p. 23. Paizo Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-1-60125-247-0