Story Line


The Beginning

In the constellation known as Sagittarius the Archer, positioned at ¯41 degrees right ascendancy 19'25'' two hundred light years from the Sol system, there is a fourth-magnitude blue-white star designated as Alpha Sagittarius. The Arab astronomers who discovered it called it Rukbat Al-Rami, or "the Archer's Knee." Throughout Earth's history, it has also been called Al Rami, Ruchbar ur Ranich, Rucba, Rukbah, and Rukbar, all referring to the ancient Arabic tale that gave the constellation its name.

Circling the star Rukbat are five planets, two asteroid belts, a rogue planet on an eccentric orbit captured by the gravity well in recent millennia, and as Oort cloud at the perimeter of the stellar system.

The Oort cloud is composed of smaller particles than expected of such a body, as Oort clouds are usually nebulous collections of stone and ice chunks or comets.

The first and second planets are too small to sustain human life. The fourth, which has a cluster of little moons, and the fifth planet, a dark world, are too far away from Rukbat for comfortable existence; they are seperated from the sun and from each other by the two asteroid belts, which significantly cuts down on the sunlight they receive.

On the third planet, amoung seas of liquid water, heavy volcanic and plate-tectonic activity caused the earliest single land mass to re-form into three continents over the last hundred million years. One continent is gigantic, taking up more than half of the available landmass. The second, somewhat smaller and resembling a dragon in flight looking back over its shoulder, is approximately the size of Earth's Eurasian landmass. The last, very small, barren continent is isolated on the other side of the world in the middle of an ocean five thousand miles wide. The planet's diameter is approximately sixty-five hundred miles.

A single revolution around Rukbat takes this world 366 earth days. (A Pern day is a little over twenty-four hours long; the Pernese count 362 days to their year, with a leap year every sixth year.) the world has an axial tilt of fifteen degrees, giving it distinct seasons and climate belts ranging from snowly at both poles to hot summers at the tropical equator. It remains actively volcanic. New cones form in the sea bed near both large continents and in volcanic sea islands arrayed in long barrier ranges enclosing the two like giant parenttheses. The southern continent shows considerable volcanic and tectonic activity. A deep trench, probably a subsidence center, lies in the ocean near the stable, having basement rock as its pedestal.

Two moons revolve around the planet. timor, the more distant moon, is about the size of Luna, while the closer moon, Belior, is somewhat smaller, so Pern has tides. there is a constant thirty-mile-an-hour head wind, driven by the pattern of tides and thermals from the volcanoes.

Thread

Thread begins as a spore in the icy cometary trail following the Red Star. As it is captured by planetary gravity, it elongates into a slender filament heated by the friction of its fall through the atmosphere.

 

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