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2285: A Space Oddity (Genesis)
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Timo: [QB] Dang, [b]Reverend[/b] beat me to a couple of those points. The Mutara nebula was so close to the Regula I lab and the Regula asteroid that I'd argue that both of those, and in fact the entire system, were already deep within the nebula. A good location for secret research, really... In the mere minutes of the flight-from-Regula chase, the limping ships couldn't really have moved out of the system or anything. The Regula system could have had plenty of stars, really. Perhaps it was a stellar nursery, with dozens of little starlets zooming this way or that, and making the definition of "day" or "night" interesting from the planetary point of view. Assuming there was a planetary point of view. The name of the asteroid was "Regula", without any Roman numerals; it was the station that was called "Regula I". So perhaps there was just this one rock in the area, and the station was tagging along that rock when surveying the stellar ballet around it, as Starfleet understood that the orbit of the asteroid (no matter how screwy or wobbly) would be the stablest and safest in the region, at least in the near past and hopefully near future. Timo Saloniemi [/QB][/QUOTE]
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