I dunno - he looks like he could potentially be either, or a mix of both.I hope that Bana isn't supposed to be a Romulan (or a Klingon) as he doesn't look like either. Couldn't he just be a rebellious Vulcan with a cool tatto and messed up ear(s)?
I dunno - he looks like he could potentially be either, or a mix of both.I hope that Bana isn't supposed to be a Romulan (or a Klingon) as he doesn't look like either. Couldn't he just be a rebellious Vulcan with a cool tatto and messed up ear(s)?
We don't have any reasoning for the Romulans (unless you want to use the argument that their are billions of Romulans that don't necessarily all long the same just like we don't on Earth).
I've seen humans with huge, craggy eyebrow ridges of Cro Magnan (or is that Neanderthal?) proportions. Is it so hard to believe that most of the Romulans who left Vulcan were the ones who looked less like the ones left behind. Or that like-foreheaded Romulans stick together? Or that natural selection bred out any ridged Vulcans that were still around? Or they chose not to mate and pass on the same genetic patterns as those who left?
The suggested dates of the Romulan-Vulcan split are one to two thousand years earlier, not a lot of time for natural selection to favor something that seems so trivial as a ridge on the forehead. That doesn't seem too likely.
Some sort of "ethnic cleansing," though, that is more plausible. But what always screws up this debate is that Spock was able to walk around Romulus without being noticed or (regularly, so we'd see it) harassed or discriminated against... but perhaps you could argue he was, just off-screen.
There's another take on this issue.I've seen humans with huge, craggy eyebrow ridges of Cro Magnan (or is that Neanderthal?) proportions. Is it so hard to believe that most of the Romulans who left Vulcan were the ones who looked less like the ones left behind. Or that like-foreheaded Romulans stick together? Or that natural selection bred out any ridged Vulcans that were still around? Or they chose not to mate and pass on the same genetic patterns as those who left?
The suggested dates of the Romulan-Vulcan split are one to two thousand years earlier, not a lot of time for natural selection to favor something that seems so trivial as a ridge on the forehead. That does seem to likely.
Some sort of "ethnic cleansing," though, that is more plausible. But what always screws up this debate is that Spock was able to walk around Romulus without being noticed or (regularly, so we'd see it) harassed or discriminated against... but perhaps you could argue he was, just off-screen.
Suppose that the reason that the founders of the Romulan Star Empire decided to settle in that particular system was because they'd found a very similar "proto-vulcan" race already there. Let's call them, say, "Remans."
The two races were similar enough, biologically, to be compatible. They could even interbreed (although that would be fraught with stigma).
The mixed-breed people didn't look like "pure Vulcans" anymore. They'd take on certain characteristics of their Reman bloodline. Which might well include forehead structures.
Over centuries, you'd have "egalitarian" periods where everyone was treated equally and "racially-divided" periods when the two groups were treated differently (depending on which group was in power at the time).
Think of the "smooth-foreheaded" Romulans as "Pure, Aryan Romulans." Think of the Remans as any of the derogatory terms that have been used by say, the National Socialists in 1930s/1940s Germany or Italy, or in early-1900s Russia, or so forth. It's not hard to draw the parallels, is it?
The episode(s) were just on Sci-Fi recently. I noticed that there were both ridged and non-ridged Rommies on the homeworld with no explanation needed.I've seen humans with huge, craggy eyebrow ridges of Cro Magnan (or is that Neanderthal?) proportions. Is it so hard to believe that most of the Romulans who left Vulcan were the ones who looked less like the ones left behind. Or that like-foreheaded Romulans stick together? Or that natural selection bred out any ridged Vulcans that were still around? Or they chose not to mate and pass on the same genetic patterns as those who left?
The suggested dates of the Romulan-Vulcan split are one to two thousand years earlier, not a lot of time for natural selection to favor something that seems so trivial as a ridge on the forehead. That does seem to likely.
Some sort of "ethnic cleansing," though, that is more plausible. But what always screws up this debate is that Spock was able to walk around Romulus without being noticed or (regularly, so we'd see it) harassed or discriminated against... but perhaps you could argue he was, just off-screen.
I guess Kirk really did visit Romulus!
The episode(s) were just on Sci-Fi recently. I noticed that there were both ridged and non-ridged Rommies on the homeworld with no explanation needed.
There's another take on this issue.
Suppose that the reason that the founders of the Romulan Star Empire decided to settle in that particular system was because they'd found a very similar "proto-vulcan" race already there. Let's call them, say, "Remans."
The two races were similar enough, biologically, to be compatible. They could even interbreed (although that would be fraught with stigma).
The mixed-breed people didn't look like "pure Vulcans" anymore. They'd take on certain characteristics of their Reman bloodline. Which might well include forehead structures.
Over centuries, you'd have "egalitarian" periods where everyone was treated equally and "racially-divided" periods when the two groups were treated differently (depending on which group was in power at the time).
Think of the "smooth-foreheaded" Romulans as "Pure, Aryan Romulans." Think of the Remans as any of the derogatory terms that have been used by say, the National Socialists in 1930s/1940s Germany or Italy, or in early-1900s Russia, or so forth. It's not hard to draw the parallels, is it?
There's another take on this issue.
Suppose that the reason that the founders of the Romulan Star Empire decided to settle in that particular system was because they'd found a very similar "proto-vulcan" race already there. Let's call them, say, "Remans."
The two races were similar enough, biologically, to be compatible. They could even interbreed (although that would be fraught with stigma).
The mixed-breed people didn't look like "pure Vulcans" anymore. They'd take on certain characteristics of their Reman bloodline. Which might well include forehead structures.
Over centuries, you'd have "egalitarian" periods where everyone was treated equally and "racially-divided" periods when the two groups were treated differently (depending on which group was in power at the time).
Think of the "smooth-foreheaded" Romulans as "Pure, Aryan Romulans." Think of the Remans as any of the derogatory terms that have been used by say, the National Socialists in 1930s/1940s Germany or Italy, or in early-1900s Russia, or so forth. It's not hard to draw the parallels, is it?
That's not a bad explanation at all. Supposedly Vulcans are descended from Sargon's people, so let us suppose that his people were "Vulcaniod" and had the ridges. They founded several colonies across the galaxy, and some succeeded, leading to the Vulcans, Remans, Mintakans, and perhaps others. Over 500,000 years, only the Vulcans lost their ridges -- that's more than enough time, certainly much more plausible than ridges developing in a mere 1000 or 2000 years (and also seeing them in the Mintakans).
Over 500,000 years, only the Vulcans lost their ridges -- that's more than enough time, certainly much more plausible than ridges developing in a mere 1000 or 2000 years (and also seeing them in the Mintakans).
Of course, to accept that, you have to flush every TNG-and-later Star Trek episode and several movies.There's another take on this issue.
Suppose that the reason that the founders of the Romulan Star Empire decided to settle in that particular system was because they'd found a very similar "proto-vulcan" race already there. Let's call them, say, "Remans."
The two races were similar enough, biologically, to be compatible. They could even interbreed (although that would be fraught with stigma).
The mixed-breed people didn't look like "pure Vulcans" anymore. They'd take on certain characteristics of their Reman bloodline. Which might well include forehead structures.
Over centuries, you'd have "egalitarian" periods where everyone was treated equally and "racially-divided" periods when the two groups were treated differently (depending on which group was in power at the time).
Think of the "smooth-foreheaded" Romulans as "Pure, Aryan Romulans." Think of the Remans as any of the derogatory terms that have been used by say, the National Socialists in 1930s/1940s Germany or Italy, or in early-1900s Russia, or so forth. It's not hard to draw the parallels, is it?
That's not a bad explanation at all. Supposedly Vulcans are descended from Sargon's people, so let us suppose that his people were "Vulcaniod" and had the ridges. They founded several colonies across the galaxy, and some succeeded, leading to the Vulcans, Remans, Mintakans, and perhaps others. Over 500,000 years, only the Vulcans lost their ridges -- that's more than enough time, certainly much more plausible than ridges developing in a mere 1000 or 2000 years (and also seeing them in the Mintakans).
And even BETTER explanation is that Romulans have NEVER had ridges, and just like in Balance of Terror, they look exactly like Vulcans.
Of course, to accept that, you have to flush every TNG-and-later Star Trek episode and several movies.That's not a bad explanation at all. Supposedly Vulcans are descended from Sargon's people, so let us suppose that his people were "Vulcaniod" and had the ridges. They founded several colonies across the galaxy, and some succeeded, leading to the Vulcans, Remans, Mintakans, and perhaps others. Over 500,000 years, only the Vulcans lost their ridges -- that's more than enough time, certainly much more plausible than ridges developing in a mere 1000 or 2000 years (and also seeing them in the Mintakans).
And even BETTER explanation is that Romulans have NEVER had ridges, and just like in Balance of Terror, they look exactly like Vulcans.
And even BETTER explanation is that Romulans have NEVER had ridges, and just like in Balance of Terror, they look exactly like Vulcans.
It also includes and obvious "nose to forehead wide blend" prosthetic which is inconsistent with Romulans (much less Vulcans) but is completely consistent with Klingons.And even BETTER explanation is that Romulans have NEVER had ridges, and just like in Balance of Terror, they look exactly like Vulcans.
Nope. It's inconsistent with canon.
Bana's makeup in the photo includes an obvious forehead ridge.
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