Places
Trillius Prime
Trillius Prime (STSC)
Trillius Prime, also known simply as “Trill,” was a Class-M planet in the Kalandra Sector of the Alpha Quadrant.[3] Travis Mayweather visited Trillius Prime as a teenager.[2] The Caves of Mak’ala were a series of underground caverns that extended for several kilometers, with pools in which the unjoined symbionts resided while awaiting hosts and were cared for by the Guardians.[1]
References
- 1. “Equilibrium.” Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episode 450. Television. 17 October 1994.
- 2. “Broken Bow.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episodes 01-02. Television. 26 September 2001.
- 3. Star Trek: Star Charts. Book. 2002. Pocket Books.
T’Khut
T’Khut (ST-01)
A Class-G planet, T’Khut was the third planet orbiting 40 Eridani A in the 40 Eridani trinary system.[2] It shared a binary orbit with Vulcan, and had one moon,[1] which (in at least one timeline) was called Delta Vega.[3]
References
- 1. Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Film. 7 December 1979.
- 2. “Star Trek: Star Charts.” Star Trek (Uncategorized). Book. October 2002. Pocket Books.
- 3. Star Trek. Film. 8 May 2009.
Terra Nova
Terra Nova (ENT-06)
The third planet in the Eta Cassiopeia System,[2] Terra Nova was a Class-M world colonized by Humans in 2087. Contact with the colony was lost shortly afterward, and wasn’t reestablished until 2151, when the Enterprise NX-01 visited the lost colony. It was discovered that a meteor strike devastated the colony, and radiation from the impact was slowly killing the descendants of the colonists, who had moved underground and forgotten their Human heritage. The colonists were eventually transplanted to another continent on the opposite side of the planet.[1] Terra Nova became a member of the Federation in 2178.[2]
References
Talos IV
Talos IV (TOS-00)
Talos IV surface (TOS-00)
The fourth planet in the Talos Star Group and homeworld of the Talosians, Talos IV, a Class-M world, had an Oxygen-Nitrogen atmosphere that, according to U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 science officer Lieutenant Spock, was “[h]eavy with inert elements, but well within safety limits; Gravity 0.9 g; barren surface with little vegetation.” One blue-leafed plant caused a high-pitched humming noise from its vibrations, which had a pleasant effect on humanoids when touched, even eliciting a smile from Spock. According to Captain Pike, Earth was “in the stellar group at the other end of this galaxy.” The planet’s surface was decimated “thousands of centuries ago,” according to Vina, in a nuclear war among the Talosians, who all but destroyed themselves in the process.[1]
References
- 1. “The Cage.” Star Trek, Episode 00. Television. 1965 (Unaired).
Talos Star Group
Talos Star Group (TOS-00)
No ships or Earth colonies had traveled as far out as the Talos Star Group when the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 arrived there[1] in 2254,[2] so it had never been explored. At least one system in the group was superficially similar to the Sol System, with eleven planets; the fourth was determined to be Class-M. According to Enterprise Captain Pike, Earth was in “the stellar group at the other end of this galaxy.”[1]
References
- 1. “The Cage.” Star Trek, Episode 00. Television. 1965 (Unaired).
- 2. Star Trek: Star Charts. Book. 2002. Pocket Books.
Suraya Bay
A popular Risan vacation spot, which featured villas built into the cliffs overlooking the ocean. Captain Archer looked forward to staying there for his shore leave in 2152.[1, 2]
References
Suliban Helix
Suliban Helix (ENT-01-02)
Massive Suliban facility made up of hundreds of smaller, interlocked cell ships. The Helix was a spiral-shaped station, and individual ships could engage and disengage without harming the overall structure. The Helix contained the Temporal Chamber where the Suliban could communicate with a contact from the future. In 2151, Captain Archer and Trip Tucker infiltrated the Helix and freed the Klingon courier Klaang.[1]
References
Subquadrants
Quadrants were divided into numbered Subquadrants and Sector Zones. The intersection of a subquadrant and a sector zone resulted in a roughly cube-shaped Sector Grid, which was 5000 light years long and 3600 light years high along the galactic plane; the width varied by distance from the galactic core—at the rim, it could be as wide as 8727 light years. Each sector grid was then divided into a cubic grid of 100 Sector Quads, which were then further broken down into 900 ore more roughly cubical Sector Blocks, each measuring nearly 100 cubic light years (varying by distance from the galactic core). Finally, sector blocks were divided into 100 sectors, each measuring 20 cubic light years.Sector numbers were a nine-digit sequence with the first two digits representing the sector grid, the first digit of which represented the subquadrant and the second the sector zone (e.g. Sector Grid 15 was the intersection of subquadrant 1 and sector zone 5); the next two digits represented the sector quad; the next three digits represented the sector block; and the final two digits represented the sector proper.[1]
References
Starbase Corinth IV
In 2266, the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 was scheduled to visit Starbase Corinth IV, where Commodore Jose Dominguez eagerly awaited an “urgent” delivery of Mexican red chili peppers from his friend, Captain James T. Kirk.[1]
References
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