Hawthorne Magic Question.
Hypothetically.
Let's assume you enchant an area with a permanent "Continual Sunlight". Let's assume the enchanted area is, oh, for math's sake, 120 feet across.
Let's assume you, or someone else, then use "Move Terrain" on a different area, say one that is 90 feet across, and plop it into the middle of the Continual Sunlight enchantment.
"Move Terrain" says it displaces whatever is there, but I'm not sure it's supposed to apply to area magic.
Would:
A. You end up with a ring of permanent sunlight that was 15 feet thick, around the relocated terrain, that was itself not in permanent sunlight? (This is the moved terrain blotted out a 90 foot wide circle of the area, but left a 15-foot thick ring alone.)
B. You end up with a ring of permanent sunlight that was ~30 feet thick, around the relocated terrain? (Area of a 120' circle, expressed as a ring, with an inside diameter of 90'.)
C. End up with the whole area illuminated, with a 15 area of the original sunbeam that wasn't now home to the 90' wide moved terrain?
D. Have a 90' circle of relocated terrain butted up against a 120' circle of permanent sunbeam, sticking together as a circle and being displaced as a unit?
E. Have a 90' circle of relocated terrain, partially illuminated by a 120' circle of permanent sunbeam, as the center of the sunbeam was pushed to the edge, but overlapped into the newly relocated terrain?
F. Break the original enchantment, resulting in no area being enchanted, as the newly moved terrain overlapped the center of the original enchantment?
F. Something completely different?