Done as orderd.
Also, the image climate did not update properly on the last one, so this shows the cold areas better.
North pole changes to Lat 30 Long 80.
... hmmm.
Well, the layout of the land-masses works okay, but assuming that the greenish-brown areas are lower-fertility regions created by altitude and related climate issues, the increased rise-and-fall of the terrain might have been a mistake.
Hoping that the third time will be the charm:
- Please go back to the first run's settings for terrain ruggedness. (We might end up going a little below that, even, but not on this run - let's see how the other parts shake out first.)
- It might pay to bump the average equatorial temperatures up by a few degrees, as well. (You're right that this planet's looking a little too cool for my concept - especially by the looks of all those lifeless mountaintop regions.) The D.C. benchmark was, what, an average of 20-25 C? Nudge it up by 5 degrees (to 25-30 C) and let's see how we go.
- Maybe increase the precipitation by a few percentage-points as well? This one's dealer's choice.
Sorry to be such a pain-in-the-ass customer about this,
Blacknova.