#794210412868
Belongs to Gemini Dreams's Pride
(View Former Prides)

Haumea | Gray |Common

"💝🌽"

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This lioness gave birth in the past two years. She is on a breeding cool down and will be breedable again in 18 real life days.
Lion Stats
Experience
1365 / 3960 (34%)
Level 7
Strength 55 Speed 57
Stamina 61 Smarts 67
Agility 55 Skill 4
Total Stats: 299
Lion Currents
Age 3 years, 10 months old
Hunger
45%
Mood
100%
Sex Female
Pose Default
Personality
Grumpy (Evil)

Adult Stage
Newborn Stage 100%
Young Cub Stage 100%
Cub Stage 100%
Adolescent Stage 100%
Adult Stage 14.102564102564%
Elder Stage 0%
Breeding Info
Father Gemini Dreams Mother Caelum (Deceased) View Full Heritage
Last Bred 5 days ago Fertility Very Low (22%) View All Cubs Bred (0)
Appearance Markings
Base Gray (Tan Skin) Slot 1: Feline 7 Silver (100%) Tier 2
Slot 2: Noctis Crackle (55%) Tier 2
Slot 4: Cimmerian Undersides (100%) Tier 1
Slot 6: Inverted Rosette White (100%) Tier 4
Slot 7: Feline 3 Noctis (64%) Tier 2
Slot 9: Noctis Tail Half (79%) Tier 1
Slot 10: Celestial Speckles (43%) Tier 3


This lion has 1 marking hidden on the following slot:
11
Genetics Black Dark Countershaded Common
Eyes Silver
Mane Type Savage
Mane Color Nuummite
Mutation None
Marking Slots
10
Equipped Decorations
Grove of a Deer God

Above
Foliage Mule Deer Antlers
Forest Green Butterfly
African Flower Ornaments [Herbal]
Pearl and Flower Ornaments [Herbal]
Lifetime Hunting Results
Total Hunts 4 Successful Hunts 3 Success Rate 75%


Biography
G4

Name History
Originally designated 2003 EL61 (and nicknamed Santa by one discovery team), Haumea is located in the Kuiper Belt, a donut-shaped region of icy bodies beyond the orbit of Neptune. The other known dwarf planets in the Kuiper Belt are Pluto, Eris, and Makemake (dwarf planet Ceres is located in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter).

Haumea is roughly the same size as Pluto. It is one of the fastest rotating large objects in our solar system. The fast spin distorts Haumea's shape, making this dwarf planet look like a football.

Two teams claim credit for discovering Haumea citing evidence from observations made in 2003 and 2004. The International Astronomical Union’s Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature lists the discovery location as Sierra Nevada Observatory in Spain on Mar. 7, 2003, but no official discoverer is listed.

Everything we know about Haumea is from observations with ground-based telescopes from around the world.





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