Scientific achievement
Around this point, we see the first cases of writing appear, at Khusuru in Upper Sunar.
Scratched into clay tablets, Sunar's modern usage of papyrus would not develop until much later. Very few tablets from this period exist to this day, with most having long ago been lost or destroyed. There are, however several more from later dates, indicating the usage of clay tablets likely lasted alongside papyrus for a significant period of time. Symbolic rather than phonetic, the clay plates the ancient people of Sunar wrote on, did not relate to any verbal sounds, but instead presented images to represent nouns. The most common image shown on the ancient tablets are bushels of grain; suggesting its usage as an early form of currency or taxation in Upper Sunar. Several other tablets appear to detail religious ceremony for what is thought to potentially be an early form of the Zunite Faith, portraying bearded men, covered in gold jewelry, sacrificing chickens and goats in the waters of the Sun. This presents a highly ritualized society for the time and displays some of the first examples of the well known association, between gold and the divine, in Sunarian society.