I mean, there was that time when they found a truck just floating in open space because they detected...what? gasoline? rust? I don't recall, but it was ridiculous.
It was low band FM signal. Somehow the radio kept working in the vacuum of space. All of your ideas sound more plausible.I mean, there was that time when they found a truck just floating in open space because they detected...what? gasoline? rust? I don't recall, but it was ridiculous.
Plus finding the spacecraft from the first Mars mission or whatever.That's also the episode where they found Amelia Earhart alive and well. (No joke.) The ST universe is small indeed, and you never know who you'll bump into.
It was low band FM signal. Somehow the radio kept working in the vacuum of space. All of your ideas sound more plausible.
Plus finding the spacecraft from the first Mars mission or whatever.
OMG! I totally forgot about that random Mars thing! They also seemed to run into a lot of Borg or former Borg that were assimilated in the Alpha Quadrant. The one woman from Wolf 359, I can't even.
I took a screenshot of what I think is the only full view we get of the Brightest Star obelisk, flipped it upside down and cleaned it up. It's really low res, but for your consideration:What's also interesting – and I'm not sure if this has been pointed out – is that the floating Ba'ul obelisk in “The Brightest Star” looked an awful lot like an upside down Preservers obelisk from “The Paradise Syndrome” and “Context is for Kings”. So maybe the Kelpiens aren't actually harvested, but somehow saved or relocated by the Preservers?
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EDIT: Also, the Preservers' sign language we saw on the obelisk could very well be the same we see on the Ba'ul tablet. Unfortunately you can't really make out the latter. At least in the images I'm able to find online.
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Spock's drawings.
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Here's another shot of the preserver languageFor what it's worth.
Yeah that's it, looks similar to the Ba'ul language. Might be from the episode with Saru's sister.This one? "Ten sentry ships on an intercept course!"
But doesn't he start trying to play them on his lyre? I remember McCoy coming into his cabin, Spock playing the lyre and him mentioning that they weren't words, but a form of music, then tells McCoy the story about The Preservers.I didn't think Spock exactly recognized the symbols in The Paradise Syndrome. He described it as "evidently, some form of writing," and later on he determines that it's "a highly advanced form of cipher writing." That doesn't imply much familiarity.
Kor
Yes, he managed to discover that they were musical notes after many sleepless days of analysis and pondering. I thought the dialog implied that Spock learned about the Preservers from those symbols once he figured out how to "read" them.But doesn't he start trying to play them on his lyre? I remember McCoy coming into his cabin, Spock playing the lyre and him mentioning that they weren't words, but a form of music, then tells McCoy the story about The Preservers.
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