Board Thread:General Mod Discussion/@comment-33185350-20171014150536/@comment-33185350-20171017134644

S&#039;moregoth wrote: Sir Lazuli wrote: Yes it would be in my opinion. In The Hobbit, Tolkien writes like he hadn’t come up with Gollum’s backstory yet. All he is is one of the nameless things at the bottom of the world - “Deep down here by the dark water lived old Gollum, a small slimy creature. I don’t know where he came from, nor who or what he was. He was Gollum-as dark as darkness, except for two big round pale eyes in his thin face.”

Also you will see from the quote in the original post it was Gollum’s intention to get deep down to the Roots of the Mountains. So I think it’s reasonable that we take his cavern to be there. In my opinion, what you are suggesting is something deeper than the roots of the mountains. Also, the place where Gollum was (if I remember correctly) was occasionally visited by Goblins. If what you are describing is the place that Gandalf fell into with the Balrog, I doubt Goblins would have gone there at all. More or less, yeah. Gollum’s lake would be near the top of the dimension, but still in the roots of the mountains. Gundabad Orcs / goblins would still inhabit the upper levels, as said above. Gollum’s lake was the deepest extent of the goblin-tunnels in that particular direction, and they occasionally wandered that deep.