^Well, ENT did present a somewhat conflicting portrayal of Andor(ia) itself, in that the novel version wasn't a glaciated moon of a giant planet. But that's reconcilable if we assume Andoria was in an ice age which abated between the 22nd and 24th centuries.
It does bug me that the Andorians were ignored so hard in the 24th century. I really like them, their look is really neat, and they've gotten brilliant development in the novels. At least ENT did right by them even if they did portray them as heteronormative.
Yeah. I think people forget that planets are big. Now, this is science fiction and therefore not every inhabited planet has to follow the physical styling of Earth, but surely any planet's equatorial latitudes have temperature differences compared to the planet's polar latitudes.^Well, ENT did present a somewhat conflicting portrayal of Andor(ia) itself, in that the novel version wasn't a glaciated moon of a giant planet. But that's reconcilable if we assume Andoria was in an ice age which abated between the 22nd and 24th centuries.
For that matter, we only ever saw part of Andor in "The Aenar." It's possible that other parts of the surface were much more temperate.
It does bug me that the Andorians were ignored so hard in the 24th century. I really like them, their look is really neat, and they've gotten brilliant development in the novels. At least ENT did right by them even if they did portray them as heteronormative.
That´s why I like the DS9 Relaunch so much. There we have Shar, one of my favorite characters. And we learn more about the Andorians and Shar being torn between his Starfleet duty and his family obligations.
^Well, ENT did present a somewhat conflicting portrayal of Andor(ia) itself, in that the novel version wasn't a glaciated moon of a giant planet. But that's reconcilable if we assume Andoria was in an ice age which abated between the 22nd and 24th centuries.
For that matter, we only ever saw part of Andor in "The Aenar." It's possible that other parts of the surface were much more temperate.
(I keep wondering -- if the ice planet in the Star Wars galaxy is Hoth, why isn't the lava planet called Coldh?)
Jhemal and Shran's conversation during his convalescence would make that a little suspect, though. His response to her question about if it ever gets above freezing would be a little odd if there were places on Andor that do; you'd think he'd mention that if so, rather than talk about how warm other places get. And then there's the original Kumari, which was specifically an icecutter that circumnavigated Andor.
Titan has one-sixth of the surface area of Earth, so there is there.And while planets are big, moons aren't necessarily so. The climate on, say, Titan (which seems to be the sort of thing they were going for with Andor in ENT, a glaciated moon heated by tidal interactions with its primary body) doesn't vary appreciably from pole to pole.
Titan has one-sixth of the surface area of Earth, so there is there.And while planets are big, moons aren't necessarily so. The climate on, say, Titan (which seems to be the sort of thing they were going for with Andor in ENT, a glaciated moon heated by tidal interactions with its primary body) doesn't vary appreciably from pole to pole.
I would suggest that to count as a class-M planet at all, with an environment very broadly comparable to Earth's and a similar level of gravity and all, Andor would have to be substantially larger than Titan.
I think that present Treklit has established that its primary is Procyon, but if you mean in canon then no. (Minor note, though: If I remember right, it's also established that Andoria isn't the name of the gas giant, but rather an alternate name for Andor; "Andoria" is to "Andor" what "Terra" is to "Earth", a name that outsiders use and that isn't technically incorrect but that isn't the proper modern name according to most locals.)Much depends on the details of Andor's orbit around Andoria and the two worlds' common orbit around their sun. Do we even know if Andor is in Procyon or Epsilon Indi?
I recently rewatched ENT, and one thing that kept nagging at me were the alien species that played such an important role. The Andorians, the Suliban, the Xindi...races that were totally absent from 24th Century Trek.
I am about a decade behind in my TrekLit reading, but I know there was an Andorian character introduced in the DS9 Relaunch. Have any of the other novels made an effort to bring some of these ENT species into the 24th Century?
I think that present Treklit has established that its primary is Procyon, but if you mean in canon then no.Do we even know if Andor is in Procyon or Epsilon Indi?
Titan has one-sixth of the surface area of Earth, so there is there.And while planets are big, moons aren't necessarily so. The climate on, say, Titan (which seems to be the sort of thing they were going for with Andor in ENT, a glaciated moon heated by tidal interactions with its primary body) doesn't vary appreciably from pole to pole.
I would suggest that to count as a class-M planet at all, with an environment very broadly comparable to Earth's and a similar level of gravity and all, Andor would have to be substantially larger than Titan.
Star Charts aside (since there's many places as it is where it disagrees with Treklit), do we know for certain that it is classified as class-M?
I think that present Treklit has established that its primary is Procyon, but if you mean in canon then no.[/QUOTE]Much depends on the details of Andor's orbit around Andoria and the two worlds' common orbit around their sun. Do we even know if Andor is in Procyon or Epsilon Indi?
Was Archer's encounter with the Andorians at P'Jem first contact?
Was Archer's encounter with the Andorians at P'Jem first contact?
It was, yeah. Archer had never even heard of Andorians before then.
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