Hey DA, I just spent the last 3 weeks working on this alternate flat earth map, my own more fleshed out version of the popular image showcasing hypothetical continents beyond the ice wall, which i could not find a source for, so if any of you know who made it, please let me know so I can credit them for inspiring my work here. Since my map is just my take on another persons work, I feel its only appropriate to make this map free to use for anyone who'd like to work with it, whether its for world-building, alternate history or speculative biology. No need to ask for permission, just make sure to send me a link to your take on it so I can see!I don't want to dictate what I think others should use this map for, so if you have alternate ideas regarding the biology, history, labels, biomes, etc., feel free to disregard mine if you decide to use this map for your own work. Especially regarding the way I've labeled a lot of the landmasses, it implies certain cultures/countries from our own world being the ones to discover them. I just did this to give the map a little pizzazz, and by no means are they inseparable from the main product. Here are some clean versions you can use if you'd like to redo the labels/colors from scratch:No labels: www.deviantart.com/ohawhewhe/a… Just the outlines: www.deviantart.com/ohawhewhe/a… and here's a link to what I believe is the original image this is based off of: www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comme… I've found other versions that showcase additional continents outside of a second barrier that encapsulates the ice wall, but none of those were really satisfactory for my purposes so I decided to do everything beyond the second barrier from scratch, and I'm quite fond of the result.some clarification on some of the stranger features:So the second barrier which encapsulates the world beyond the ice wall isn't covered in glaciers, but instead a super dense mountain range, like the roughest, most desolate regions of the hymalayas, forming an unbroken ring that separates the seas and biospheres of the second world from the third. Some of the coastal areas, like the subcontinent Libras and the Atum islands to the west, as well as various fjords you'd be able to find along its barriers. While the ice wall has some gaps, this mountain ring is uniform. In my mind, its been that way for over a hundred million years, so the the biosphere of the world beyond is even more radically divergent from what we're familiar with.instead of one uniform barrier, there are four immense ecoregions, all harsh, desolate, and seemingly endless, that surround the world beyond the mountain ring. The walls of odin is a sheer cliff face that towers high into the atmosphere, the top being so high up that their surfaces are inhospitable to humans and most terrestrial life. Other plateus with the same attributes exist in the eastern and southern edges of the third world, denoted by the same light-grey coloring. You'll see near the top that the walls of asgard merge with the mountain ring, which creates an isolated inland sea with a single large island, Horus. Also around the same area you'll see a bunch of dark, root-like lines populating the landmass, these are meant to represent a sprawling cave system, some caves starting along the ocean, and thus could be sailed through, (though you'd eventually hit a dead end) others higher up above the water.The other 3 wastes should be obvious, the scorched wastes is a giant desert, the frozen wastes is a giant glacier, and the abyssal ocean is a really deep ocean with no land and lots of crazy storms.the island continent Thoth was labeled in the original image as "the moving island." Which I thought was a unique, if not a little outlandish, idea. Since this world already breaks the laws of physics as it is, I've decided to keep it moving in my head cannon (circling the planet every 1000 years or so, with those Sledovat Ostrovu islands trailing behind it. They would serve well to transmit plant and animal species across the continents that would've remained isolated otherwise, through dispersal methods like rafting, island hopping or storms blowing airborne life forms off-course and into these foreign lands.I'd love to talk more about my ideas for this abominable world I've mapped out for you, but I'm low on time, sadly. I may come back later and delve deeper into the possibilities such a bizarre setting could provide, perhaps in the form of a youtube video... but for now, if you have any questions or ideas, feel free to comment and I'll get back to you ASAP.thanks for reading!-Oha