hownkai: (Default)
Cúrre ([personal profile] hownkai) wrote in [community profile] thisavrou_log2016-03-01 02:40 pm

( march intro log )

Who: Everyone
When: March 1st and on
Where: The Moira + Ceta
What: The crew finds themselves on the planet of Ceta
Warnings: Potential sci-fi creature death. Please label your content!

I
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L
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by the inquest
"Arguments on their nature are refuted by those who return to shore, wide-eyed with tales of their savagery."

All Moirans are woken to the sounds of the ship coming to a rather grating halt some time in the early morning cycle. It’s no faster or slower than any other stop, but it is unexpected as the captains didn’t mention an upcoming disembarkment. Shortly after, a message is sent to every MID:
Navigation has informed us that we’re approaching bad traveling conditions: an overactive star. Instead of stopping on Liant El, we’ll be docking here on Ceta. Please exercise caution while gathering supplies and during excursions. Follow their safety guidelines. If the chance allows, we’ll also be signing new crew on the planet. Please greet them first and show them to the ship. Thank you.
The Ingress has pulled you in. Your body experiences several sensations at once: being pushed forward as if a hand is resting on your back, momentary and startling blindness, a gentle ringing in your head. You have difficulty discerning whether it is hot or cold, but where you have been prodded is noticeably warmer than the rest of you. Some may suffer from dizziness while others are perfectly fine. Once equilibrium has been reestablished, you will notice you are standing on a long platform and that the room is filled with a soft cerulean light. It's slightly humid and dark despite the glow around you, and nothing is familiar.

For those few who come through Ceta's Ingress, there will be crew of the Moira there to greet you. They tell you of the Ingress, how it is broken, even on this planet, and that the ship is headed back to the origin of this technology. This planet’s Ingress is set precariously atop a floating rock formation, the only way from one area to the next is on small air-propelled boats. Crew members will guide everyone back to the Moira and take them to the Medbay; contracts will be signed posthaste.

WELCOME TO CETA





At first glance, Ceta seems mostly inhabitable, and that's because it is. The atmosphere around the planet is surprisingly thick in most places, sometimes thin in others, and without some way to filter the air, it is mostly unbreathable; it's a giant gas planet, its core made of various molten metals and the atmosphere a mix of oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrous. Ceta's gravity is also uneven, meaning that some areas will have stronger focal points than others. The terrain, when it is visible, appears rather rocky—hardly the best conditions for life and stable living. What's more unusual, however, is that despite this fact, there is, indeed, a small populace "living" among the mist and clouds, but it's clear they do not live here year-round. It's hunting season, and they are there for the bounty.

These visitors have built small platforms that are hooked together by ropes and swinging bridges, which they call "temporaries". Unstable buildings are rare, dangerous, and spread out over these temporaries to prevent damage or accidents. The temporaries float along, swaying and shifting with the planet’s atmosphere, and posted at every point of entry and all open surfaces are a particular set of rules that everyone must abide by. They are written in dark ink and large block letters so that all passing by will stop and read them:
NO FIRE. Flammables, ignition sources, matches, lighters, and anything that creates a spark is prohibited. The atmosphere has higher levels of hydrogen, and the smallest spark will create a problem.
AIR BREATHABILITY. Monitor your vitals. Wear masks or re-breathers if needed.
WATCH THE EDGE. All walkways are the only thing from you and falling. Be cautious and watch your step.
These signs should be given their due attention. The edge is just that: the end of where it is safe to walk. If a wooden plank gives way beneath your feet, you will plummet through hundred of miles of atmosphere before hitting the planet’s thin surface. The captains reiterate that crew should be careful and stick to the main temporaries, gather supplies, visit at their leisure, and then go back to the ship.

IT'S A BIRD! IT'S A PLANE!
The organisms that have evolved on this planet are unintelligent—a fact that is told to you by the other visitors. As there is no solid materials or ways for them to interact with their environments, these giants float along within the atmosphere, though it appears that they are flying when they are merely navigating through. They travel in groups of three or more and sometimes come close to the outskirts of the temporaries. Because there is an invisible filtration dome around the temporaries, this allows the creatures to pass through without harm and return again into the mist as they please. They are difficult to see at night and are rather skittish in the presence of sudden light.







@ THE MUSEUM
Every evening when work is done, artificial light sources illuminate the streets of the temporaries. There is one bar, if you can actually call it that, but the main attraction is a museum. The support structure appears to be made out of the skeletal system of the giants that "swim" and live on Ceta, and though the outside seems rather unassuming, the inside is not for the faint of heart. As it's considered informative, there are displays of the internal structures and functions of the very creatures that seem harmless and as unintelligent as the visitors claim. There are sections of the museum dedicated to their anatomy and what makes them so valuable: inside their air sacs, which is what gives the illusion to flying through the atmosphere, is a mineral that, when harvested, attunes and sharpens the senses so that brain capacity and function excel over one-hundred percent efficiency. Likewise, aside from these informative areas, there is also a history of how and when the visitors began to hunt them for this valuable, unnamed resource.

HARVEST SEASON
Are you looking for work? Or perhaps you're bored with your duties aboard the Moira and prefer to see just what it is these visitors do during the day? Hunters will often pay for menial labor to help with the killing and retrieval of the giants of Ceta. It is by day, not by hour, and once aboard one of the many ships, you will be put to work handling equipment or being on the lookout for "signs" of the creatures. Once they've been spotted, the real work isn't in capturing them or even trying to subdue them—though they give a good fight. It's in the harvest, done below deck once they have been safely brought into the ship's cargo areas by the tethers, that can get quite gruesome. As a defense mechanism, cutting into the skin creates a rather noxious emission that can cause disorientation, hallucinations, or unconsciousness. Worst case scenarios can often result in death.

WORD LIMITS
As things are beginning to wind up (or down), something seems to have gotten into the MID systems and caused a malfunction. On the morning of 03.13, it suddenly becomes clear that communicating with others who are not from the same universe or similar timelines seems very difficult. Understanding each other becomes rather hopeless as the day continues, and these repercussions can be felt across the entire ship. The Captains send out another MID message that appears as a jumble of unusual letters and symbols. However, there is one word that can be read by everyone and (hopefully) understood: RATCHET. Figuring out this problem shouldn't take long if everyone can leap the language barriers and work together.


( ooc; All New Arrivals: you have the choice of coming through the Moira's Ingress OR Ceta's Ingress. For questions, go here. Please comment to activity check to receive new ranks (if applicable)! )
tearmeanewone: (129)

Museum

[personal profile] tearmeanewone 2016-03-10 07:53 am (UTC)(link)
Amen to that.

[Elizabeth is looking at the exhibits in the museum with a tight, sick look on her face. At the very least, she feels an obligation to try. Even if there wasn't much in the way of books here, there must be something she can do to add to the library's collection while they're there. But this...]

[...this is making her stomach turn over.]


Everything has a cost-- let's hope these creatures aren't the only ones paying that price.
heliakon: (18)

[personal profile] heliakon 2016-03-12 05:55 am (UTC)(link)
People like this don't pay anything if they can.

[ It was always the same. Villains and criminals taking everything they could without giving anything back. But this isn't Earth and he doesn't know what he can do without causing longterm consequences. Five years ago he wouldn't have cared.

He looks at Elizabeth bleakly. ]


The whales shouldn't have to pay the price. How did they even figure out the mineral is useful if they're so toxic to be around?
tearmeanewone: (095)

[personal profile] tearmeanewone 2016-03-12 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
There's really no limit to what people will put themselves through to justify a theory. They must have killed... hundreds of these animals and dozens of their own people before they found something worth doing it for. Just because they could.

[A corner of her mouth quirks up in a sardonic smile.] You ever read Moby Dick?
heliakon: (03)

[personal profile] heliakon 2016-03-16 02:06 pm (UTC)(link)
I know it.

[ One of the advantages of being psycically educated by genomorphs is the wide cultural Gibson they gave him. Geography, history, mathematics and literature. Combined with the learning he got after leaving the lab he has a decent variety of knowledge. ]

I don't think we'd get that lucky, though. These guys don't seem the type to let the whales last long enough to become monsters.
tearmeanewone: (112)

[personal profile] tearmeanewone 2016-03-17 01:01 am (UTC)(link)
Who knows, there could be one, lone, white sky-whale that's just waiting for its moment. Or one, lone, small whale that just needs one last push before it goes ballistic.

[She folds her arms in thought, tapping her elbow with a finger.]

Maybe I'm being optimistic thinking this situation will eventually reach an untenable climax, but this kind of thing can't be sustainable. Eventually they'll learn, the whales.
heliakon: (15)

[personal profile] heliakon 2016-03-17 05:44 am (UTC)(link)
They might not be able to. Back on Earth there are animals that travel hundreds of miles every year to use the same breeding ground. Even if it's polluted.

[ It was something Aquaman and Kaldur had talked about, things Conner absorbed over the years from his friends and mentors. Things that were never included in his initial infodump education. ]

This place could be placed dead center of a place they go to on instinct.
tearmeanewone: (083)

[personal profile] tearmeanewone 2016-03-17 07:10 am (UTC)(link)
...that's a good point. [Elizabeth sighs and nods, acknowledging that in certain cases he's absolutely right.] I don't know though, I feel like... they're more intelligent than salmon.

...the next time we land on a planet with salmon, I'm going to be proven wrong, I just know it.
heliakon: (09)

[personal profile] heliakon 2016-03-24 05:58 am (UTC)(link)
It doesn't take much to be smarter than a salmon.

[ The entire museum has him on edge, he's met animals that were smart. Even a Gorilla could be a supervillain given the right opportunities. Who was to say that the whales weren't as smart as that? ]

But you're right. With a body that size... they have to have some kind of intelligence.
tearmeanewone: (119)

[personal profile] tearmeanewone 2016-03-29 12:37 am (UTC)(link)
Ouch, I can hear the alien salmon taking offense already.

[She smirks at him-- just a little humor wouldn't kill them, right? Despite the whaling equivalent of the Hall of Heroes displayed before them...]

Intelligent or no, being hunted down and killed with cruelty is a terrible thing to do to something. And then to glorify it because you can...