Bishra, The Second Moon of Mua
The "secondary" satellite orbiting Mua is this orange-yellow rock which orbits further out from Mua than it's larger sister, the great Jara. Bishra possesses a number of massive basins which appear to be the remnants of a period when the satellite possessed a dense but quickly fading atmosphere and oceans of some kind. Now vacant of any kind of fluid, these seabed are blackened with vast deposits of Basalt. Small traces of Cobalt, which is also found in greater concentration but in far less consistency on Jara, are present in the sands of Bishra and give impact sites a slightly bluish tend under the right light, such as when they crest over the horizon as the moon rotates. Early astronomers assumed these faint bluish glitters to be rivers, likening Bishra to the heavenly kingdoms mentioned in the mythologies of the lost Nomadic Kelekossi.














