T8A: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
5 bytes removed ,  5 May 2007
m
Correcting spelling and converting another Farenheit temp to Celsius. Only Farenheit mentions in Trek have been occassional in TOS, STV:TFF & 1 in "Futures End" (VOY). Celsius most common in canon
m (Um, decimalisation?)
m (Correcting spelling and converting another Farenheit temp to Celsius. Only Farenheit mentions in Trek have been occassional in TOS, STV:TFF & 1 in "Futures End" (VOY). Celsius most common in canon)
Line 37: Line 37:
[[Image:Kassas_pool.gif|right]]
[[Image:Kassas_pool.gif|right]]


*Freshwater Pools and streams are fed by underground springs. [[Kassa Quay|Kassa's]] Pool is fed by [[Kirby, Thompson|Kirby]] Falls as it drops the waters from [[Reynolds, Quinn|Reynolds]] Brook. The water in Kassa's Pool is a sparkling pool, warmed to about 85 degrees by an unknown underground source, and it filled with soothing natural sulfurs and minerals.
*Freshwater Pools and streams are fed by underground springs. [[Kassa Quay|Kassa's]] Pool is fed by [[Kirby, Thompson|Kirby]] Falls as it drops the waters from [[Reynolds, Quinn|Reynolds]] Brook. The water in Kassa's Pool is a sparkling pool, warmed to about 29C by an unknown underground source, and it filled with soothing natural sulfurs and minerals.


*[[Perkins, Samuel Nigel|Lake Perkins]] is the largest freshwater lake on the planet. It teems with fish and is home to a wide variety of flowering water planets.
*[[Perkins, Samuel Nigel|Lake Perkins]] is the largest freshwater lake on the planet. It teems with fish and is home to a wide variety of flowering water planets.


'''Plants and Animals'''
'''Plants and Animals'''
*The plants on Planta del Amor were typical of the tropical islands of Earth with very slight variations. Kitigabizi Gardens seems to encompass all of them.  
*The plants on Planeta del Amor were typical of the tropical islands of Earth with very slight variations. Kitigabizi Gardens seems to encompass all of them.  


*Animals were all non-predatory.
*Animals were all non-predatory.
Line 51: Line 51:
A 19th century French novelist named Gustave Flaubert, wrote, ''"I love above all the sight of vegetation resting upon old ruins; this embrace of nature, coming swiftly to bury the work of man the moment his hand is no longer there to defend it, fills me with deep and ample joy."''
A 19th century French novelist named Gustave Flaubert, wrote, ''"I love above all the sight of vegetation resting upon old ruins; this embrace of nature, coming swiftly to bury the work of man the moment his hand is no longer there to defend it, fills me with deep and ample joy."''


This was the feeling I had when I first saw the ruins. The metal spheres and the figure of a woman indented into the ground, were all that remained of an ancient civilization, that had evidently perished attempting to make changes to the perfection of Planta del Amor. Luckily, the planet's beauty has remained unblimished, except for the ruins, and a few other spheres scattered about the land masses.
This was the feeling I had when I first saw the ruins. The metal spheres and the figure of a woman indented into the ground, were all that remained of an ancient civilization, that had evidently perished attempting to make changes to the perfection of Planeta del Amor. Luckily, the planet's beauty has remained unblimished, except for the ruins, and a few other spheres scattered about the land masses.




10,278

edits

Navigation menu