Voyager
Alpha-441
Class-M planetoid which was home to a Maquis munitions base in or near the Demilitarized Zone—the original target of the Dreadnought missile’s Cardassian programmers.[1]
References
Alastria
A Delta Quadrant planet with a binary star about 40,000 light-years from Sikaris, which could be accessed from that planety via the Sikarians‘ spatial trajector.[1]
References
Akritiri
Delta Quadrant planet with a fascist police state that maintained a prison satellite in 2373.[1]
References
Doctor, The
The Doctor (VOY-105)
The Doctor began his life as a standard-issue Emergency Medical Hologram, or EMH, aboard the U.S.S. Voyager NCC-74656. The Doctor was originally programmed to be a short-term supplement to a starship’s medical staff, and, as a hologram, could only function in areas equipped with holographic projectors. The Doctor was originally programmed with more than five million possible treatments, with contingency options and adaptive programs utilizing multitronic pathway programming. His program included information from more than three thousand medical references taken from more than two thousand cultures and the experience of forty-seven physicians.[1]
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Chakotay
Chakotay (VOY-106)
Young Chakotay (VOY-125)
Chakotay was born in 2335 on the colony world of Trebus, which had been settled generations before by Native American Humans in search of a new world on which they could return to their ancestral ways. (VOY-) In 2350, Chakotay traveled with his father, Kolopak, back to Earth. They searched throughout Central America for artifacts of their ancestors, the Rubber Tree People, who were descended from the Mayans. Throughout his youth, Chakotay had been disillusioned with his people’s culture, often rebelling against his father.[6]
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Borg Species Designations
For thousands of years the Borg spread throughout the galaxy, conquering, assimilating, and thus destroying countless civilizations. Following every encounter, the Borg catalogue each new species with a numerical designation, rather than a proper name. The goal of the Borg, in most cases, was to completely assimilate each species by incorporating their knowledge and technology into the unified Borg Collective. One by one, each living being was converted into Borg drones. In many cases, all that remained of an assimilated civilization was the memory of its unique contributions that resided only within the accumulated knowledge of the Borg. That, and the numerical species designation. Often even the name is lost, forgotten or deleted as irrelevant. Conversely, the species designations gave a sense of the long and terrible history of the Borg and the thousands of species they encountered and absorbed.
Species designation:
116 | 125 | 149 | 180 | 218 | 259 | 262 | 263 | 312 | 329 | 521 | 571 | 689 | 2461 | 3259 | 4228 | 5174 | 5618 | 6291 | 6339 | 6961 | 8472 | 10026
Humans
Jonathan Archer (ENT-31)
James T. Kirk (TOS-05)
Jean-Luc Picard (TNG-165)
Benjamin Sisko (DS9-541)
Kathryn Janeway (ST-10)
Species originating on Earth. According to the Talosians in the 2250s, “The customs and history of [Humans] show[s] a unique hatred of captivity. Even when it’s pleasant and benevolent, [they] prefer death. This makes [them] too violent and dangerous a species for [the Talosians’] needs.” The Talosians had scanned the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701‘s databanks, and had gleaned quite a bit of information about Human history.[1]
Notable Humans
References
- 1. “The Cage.” Star Trek, Episode 00. Television. 1965 (Unaired).
- 2. “Where No Man Has Gone Before.” Star Trek, Episode 01. Television. 22 September 1966.
- 3. “Encounter at Farpoint.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episodes 101-102. Television. 28 September 1987.
- 4. “Emissary.” Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episodes 401-402. Television. 4 January 1993.
- 5. “Caretaker.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episodes 101-102. Television. 16 January 1995.
- 6. “Broken Bow.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episodes 01-02. Television. 26 September 2001.
Borg Cooperative
Notable members
After their cube was disabled, a group of former Borg were forced to establish a new community without the advantage of the collective consciousness. At some point in 2367, a Borg cube traveling through the Nekrit Expanse was disabled, apparently by an electrokinetic storm. Because the equipment on the cube was no longer functioning, the Borg’s collective consciousness collapsed and the members of this hive regained their former senses of identity and individuality.
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Borg
Borg drone (TNG-174)
Borg drone (TNG-253)
Borg drone (STEXP2)
Borg infant (TNG-142)
The Borg were a partially organic, partially cybernetic race who apparently had their origins deep within the Delta Quadrant. The thoughts of the Borg were all joined in a hive-mind, or collective consciousness, and so the entire species operated as one gigantic organism, as if the Borg race was one huge entity and the individual drones and ships merely components of the greater whole. The Borg were technologically advanced and had conquered vast regions of space in their quest for perfection, which involved forcibly assimilating the races and technologies they encountered.[1]
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