Placeholder: From left to right, from Portraits of Four Indian Kings of Canada by John Simon: Etow Oh Koam, King of the River Nation; a Ga Yeath Pieth Tow, King of the Maquas; Tee Yee Neen Ho Ga Row, Emperour of the Six Nations; Ho Nee Yeath Taw No Row, King of the Generethgarich, via Wikimedia Commons From left to right, from Portraits of Four Indian Kings of Canada by John Simon: Etow Oh Koam, King of the River Nation; a Ga Yeath Pieth Tow, King of the Maquas; Tee Yee Neen Ho Ga Row, Emperour of the Six Nations; Ho Nee Yeath Taw No Row, King of the Generethgarich, via Wikimedia Commons

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From left to right, from Portraits of Four Indian Kings of Canada by John Simon: Etow Oh Koam, King of the River Nation; a Ga Yeath Pieth Tow, King of the Maquas; Tee Yee Neen Ho Ga Row, Emperour of the Six Nations; Ho Nee Yeath Taw No Row, King of the Generethgarich, via Wikimedia Commons

doubles, twins, entangled fingers, Worst Quality, ugly, ugly face, watermarks, undetailed, unrealistic, double limbs, worst hands, worst body, Disfigured, double, twin, dialog, book, multiple fingers, deformed, deformity, ugliness, poorly drawn face, extra_limb, extra limbs, bad hands, wrong hands, poorly drawn hands, messy drawing, cropped head, bad anatomy, lowres, extra digit, fewer digit, worst quality, low quality, jpeg artifacts, watermark, missing fingers, cropped, poorly drawn

1 year ago

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Model

SSD-1B

Guidance Scale

7

Dimensions

832 × 1248

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From left to right, from Portraits of Four Indian Kings of Canada by John Simon: Etow Oh Koam, King of the River Nation; a Ga Yeath Pieth Tow, King of the Maquas; Tee Yee Neen Ho Ga Row, Emperour of the Six Nations; Ho Nee Yeath Taw No Row, King of the Generethgarich, via Wikimedia Commons
Photograph of happy native Indians dancing with paints on their faces (1843) from the Edward S. Curtis Collection
[Homo sapiens, Neanderthal] A woman nomadic hunter-gatherer
[viking warrior] Who was I? Where was I?… The landscape was totally unknown to me, even my body was unfamiliar. What forces brought me here? I searched my mind for memories… There was something there, but it was too clouded… A name… I scanned the horizon. A distant structure rose out of the mists. As evening approached I came upon an enigmatic oasis with a fountain.
The Slavs knew well enough to fear him. A god of this primeval underworld, both venerated and cursed in turns. King of this pit where myths were born. But Alex had come to face no mere idol - Khors haunted her dreams, this blight that had driven her mother to the brink. Beyond the tomb's threshold, something was awakening. Slithering over stone like a loathsome serpent roused from slumber. Two baleful orbs blinked open, choking the passage in a miasma like the mouth of Hell. Alex clutched her bl
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A set of illustrations by Thomas Theodor Heine from Thorheiten, Album von Thomas T. Heine, published by Albert Langen, 1901.
American Indian women offering some alien beings some food and water c.1880's
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[Homo sapiens, Neanderthal] A solid man nomadic hunter-gatherer with a Palaeolithic weapon around a pond
a Native American tribe, possibly the Tolkepayas (Western Yavapai); they captured and enslaved her and her sister and later sold them to the Mohave people. After several years with the Mohave, during which her sister died of hunger, she returned to American society, five years after being carried off. In subsequent years, the tale of Oatman came to be retold with dramatic license in the press, in her own "memoir" and speeches, novels, plays, movies and poetry.

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