The Taurus system comes from the TOS episode "The Galileo Seven", and the misadventures of that shuttle's crew on its second planet. I can't speak to the choices that led to Geoffrey Mandel and his team choosing that part of Beta Quadrant to site the system. I might only suggest that, given how many space-faring species are out there, a coincidental name-word coming from one of the many non-human spacer species might be in play here. Probably not the Klingons, but perhaps one of their neighbours, free or conquered...?
No. Taurus. Do you need me to screenshot it for you?"Taugus"?
It's Taugus in the original Klingon."Taugus"?
I'm not at home so I can't check the book, but could it be the star system in "The Lorelei Signal"?No. Taurus. Do you need me to screenshot it for you?
I'm not at home so I can't check the book, but could it be the star system in "The Lorelei Signal"?
I'm thinking of starting a new thread, for those of us interested, to puzzle out the locations of places, for whatever reason, not covered by Star Charts and Stellar Cartography. Places like Minos and the Lorenze Cluster, from "The Arsenal of Freedom" which just seems to have slipped Geoff and Larry's minds when working on their projects, or places from the novels, comics, etc. Seems like that thread could go either here or in Trek Literature. Which would be more appropriate?
The thing to keep in mind is that the maps in Star Charts mostly focus on the space immediately around the Federation and its neighbors, whereas the starships in TOS and TNG were supposed to be exploring far beyond the Federation's borders, pushing out the fringes of charted territory. So many of the worlds visited in those shows wouldn't be on the closer-in maps at all, but only on the wider "Known Space" inset in the second foldout of Star Charts, or even farther out than that. And on that scale, there's not really enough room to call out all the dozens of systems visited in those shows.
Watching Jeopardy tonight, a clue reminded views that one of the three stars in Alpha Centauri is called "Rijel Kentarus." Maybe that explains why "Rigel" is a major Federation Colony when the start typically called Rigel, in another constellation, is so far away. That makes sense fro most series, and it puts Rigel in range of the NX-01's first episode, but it still does not explain why Archer did not recognize a name that has been used on Earth for centuries.
I do know the 3 solid dots (upper left, upper right, bottom center) are starbases and not stars.
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