Eh, we still use it as a source for lots of things regarding the formation of Azeroth.
Still, though, I keep coming back to Kalimdor's name. Why
was Azeroth's "Pangea" known as the Land of
Eternal Starlight?
Here's from a Wiki, which presumably quotes Chronicles:
So by the time the Titan-forged finished their work of shaping Azeroth and taking care of the Well of Eternity, day turned into night.
And for some reason, they described it as "eternal".
But every landmass anywhere, and on any planet, should have access to a night sky, so that's not unique to Kalimdor.
Why was
this piece of land associated specifically with
eternal starlight?
Why did
Dark Trolls roam Azeroth at the time, and why did they turn into
Night Elves when influenced by the Well of Eternity?
Was darkness, i.e. the night, Azeroth's natural state at the time? Is Midnight, the thing which presumably happens in the expansion with the same name (unless the name simply suggests a state of despair in general, when things are at their darkest), just a return to what it was like back then?
Did Elune sort of constantly watch over this continent?
Had the Old Gods covered it in darkness in a final and desperate act?
Did the Well cause arcane stars to show in the heavens?