Faun Hakkor: Difference between revisions

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==History==
==History==
During the [[Siege of Charum Hakkor]] in the human-Forerunner wars, Faun Hakkor became under attack by [[Forerunner]] forces as well. While its planetary militia and military forces fiercely defended the world, Faun Hakkor's military installations and personnel numbers were significantly less than Charum Hakkor. While the world was captured by the Forerunners, a majority of its flora and fauna were left unharmed. Following the war, the Forerunner [[Lifeworker]] [[rate]] ensured the surveying of Faun Hakkor's remaining species.<ref name="c131"/>
During the [[Siege of Charum Hakkor]] in the human-Forerunner wars, Faun Hakkor became under attack by [[Forerunner]] forces as well. While its planetary militia and military forces fiercely defended the world, Faun Hakkor's military installations and personnel numbers were significantly less than Charum Hakkor. While the world was captured by the Forerunners, a majority of its flora and fauna were left unharmed. Following the war, the Forerunner [[Lifeworker]] [[rate]] ensured the surveying of Faun Hakkor's remaining species.<ref name="c131"/>


Around [[97,495 BCE]], the system was the test site for [[Installation 07]], one of the twelve original [[Halo Array|Halo rings]]. The Halo was set to a low power setting, but still managed to kill every organism with a nervous system on the planet; all that remained were primitive organisms such as mosses, fungi, and algae. The planet then went into a state of gradual ecological collapse. The lack of pollinators led to the rapid extinction of flowering plants, while the world's water bodies were filled with decaying matter.<ref name="c132"/>
Around [[97,495 BCE]], the system was the test site for [[Installation 07]], one of the twelve original [[Halo Array|Halo rings]]. The Halo was set to a low power setting, but still managed to kill every organism with a nervous system on the planet; all that remained were primitive organisms such as mosses, fungi, and algae. The planet then went into a state of gradual ecological collapse. The lack of pollinators led to the rapid extinction of flowering plants, while the world's water bodies were filled with decaying matter.<ref name="c132"/>
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