Places
El-Auria
Star well beyond Federation space, whose system was home to a race of long-lived, empathic humanoids until the 23rd century when the Borg destroyed their world and left a few survivors scattered about the galaxy.[1]
References
El-Adrel IV
El-Adrel IV (TNG-202)
Uninhabited Class-M planet where Tamarian captain Dathon brought Captain Picard to jointly fight an electrical beast, hoping the common survival bond would help them at last understand each other. The star system was located midway between Federation space and the territory of the Children of Tama.[1]
References
El-Adrel System
El-Adrel IV (TNG-202)
Star system midway between Federation space and the territory of the Children of Tama; the two sides met at the system’s fourth planet to finally learn how to communicate with each other.[1]
References
Ekos
Ekos (TOS-52)
Orbiting the star M34 Alpha, Ekos was the home of a humanoid native race which was corrupted by unauthorized Federation historian John Gill into adopting the Nazi credo and attacking neighbor world Zeon, until an Ekosian underground movement paved the way for peace in 2267.[1]
References
Earth Station McKinley
Earth Station McKinley drydock (TNG-178)
A shipbuilding and repair facility, Earth Station McKinley had a large orbital platform supporting several large articulated work arms, designed to service even the largest starships. The U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D was docked there for six weeks following the Borg invasion attempt in early 2368.[1] Unknown to anyone at the time, a defective dilithium chamber hatch was installed in the Enterprise‘s warp drive system at McKinley Station. The hatch contained undetected submicron fractures that were responsible for a serious explosion in the engine room later that year.[2] In Q‘s anti-time future, the U.S.S. Pasteur NCC-58928 canceled a scheduled stop at McKinley Station to proceed to the Devron System.[3]
References
- 1. “Family.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 178. Television. 1 October 1990.
- 2. “The Drumhead.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 195. Television. 29 April 1991.
- 3. “All Good Things…” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episodes 277-278. Television. 23 May 1994.
Earth Spacedock
Earth Spacedock (ST-06)
The Earth Spacedock was a massive station orbiting the planet Earth, providing service facilities for Starfleet vessels. The U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 returned to the Spacedock in 2285 following the battle with Khan in the Mutara Nebula. At the time, the ship was scheduled to be decommissioned, but Admiral Kirk stole the Enterprise from the Spacedock in his effort to rescue Spock on the Genesis Planet. Also at the Spacedock at the time was the U.S.S. Excelsior NX-2000, undergoing tests on its experimental transwarp drive.[1] The Spacedock was disabled by an alien space probe approaching Earth in 2286.[2] In 2287, the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-A was undergoing shakedown tests and systems installation at the Spacedock prior to the Nimbus III incident.[3] In 2291, the Enterprise-A left the Spacedock to escort Klingon Chancellor Gorkon to Earth for a peace conference.[4] By the late 24th century, the spacedock had been replaced by a new station, which was a larger version of the same design.[5]
V122 Timeline
In 2372, the runabout U.S.S. Yellowstone NCC-74751 was stolen from the Spacedock by Ensign Harry Kim and Tom Paris (Alt-V122).[5]
STO Timeline
Earth Spacedock prior to 2409 (STO)
Earth Spacedock after 2409 (STO)
In the early 25th century, the Earth Spacedock was replaced with a new space station complex. Though it lacked the internal dock capabilities of its predecessors, it was surrounded by orbital drydock lattices that could expand and contract to service virtually any starship type. However, in 2409, the young Q replaced this new station with its predecessor, a change that remained permanent.[6]
References
- 1. Star Trek III: The Search for Spock. Film. 1 June 1984.
- 2. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. Film. 26 November 1986.
- 3. Star Trek V: The Final Frontier. Film. 9 June 1988.
- 4. Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. Film. 6 December 1991.
- 5. “Non Sequitur.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episode 122. Television. 25 September 1995.
- 6. Star Trek Online. Game. February 2010.
Earth
Earth (TOS-21)
Earth (ENT-78)
Earth (TOS-55)
Class-M. Earth is the third planet in the Sol System[1] in Sector 001[7] and homeworld of Humans. In 2254, the Talosians viewed an image of the Sol System and many images of Earth’s history while accessing the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701‘s computer.[1] Earth became one of the founding members of the United Federation of Planets in 2161,[15] following the Romulan War,[6] and served as that body’s capital.[5] Starfleet Command and Starfleet Academy were based in San Francisco,[2, 3] while the offices of the Federation President[9] and the Federation Council chamber were located in Paris.[22] The planet hosted several advanced orbital habitats,[2] Starfleet spacedocks,[4] and satellite networks, including Federation communications networks.[12]
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Dytallix B
Dytallix B (TNG-125)
The commercial and more common name for Mira Antilla V, one of seven uninhabited planets mined for the Federation by the Dytallix Mining Corporation. A planet of locked rotation, its sun-side temperature approached 180 degrees, and the mines (deserted by the mid-24th century) lined the temperate zone along the day/night border, where winds could be extremely gusty. Captain Picard and three other captains secretly met there in 2364 to discuss fears of an alien infiltration of Starfleet.[1]
References
Durenia IV
Destination of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D after it left Starbase 133 in early 2367 following crew rotation, before turning back for the base to recreate Ensign Wesley Crusher‘s static warp bubble, which had entrapped his mother, Dr. Beverly Crusher.[1]
References
Dulisian IV
Site of a Federation colony near Galorndon Core. In 2368, a Priority-1 distress call was faked by the Romulans, involving the planet’s supposed evacuation due to a massive failure in the colony’s environment support systems, but the ruse failed to lure the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D away from meeting three Vulcan ships of “peace envoys,” which were actually a Romulan invasion force headed toward the planet Vulcan.[1]
References
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