Postby Linda » Fri Jun 20, 2008 12:44 pm
The episode is "Civilization" (hope I am not giving away to much of my story here), where the people had sailing ships and seemed to be in an a technological development period similar to earth in the 19th century. I was toying with the idea that they also had steam power and a couple of years after Enterprizes's visit, would be experimenting with electrical lighting, telegraphy, even gasoline power like the turn of the 19th to the 20th century on earth.
My husband suggested crop circles or using tar (or some dark substance) on ice at the poles for a message, and I see Distracted mentioned crop circles too. I think the radio direction tuning she suggested has a lot going for it! Riann would have to convince scientists to use that, which might make for some drama with her trying to convince them that aliens do exist.
Since Archer told Riann the Vulcans would be looking out for the planet but didn't give an exact schedule of their patrols, I am thinking the signal would have to be continuous. And radio signal would be the best bet, don't you think? Because the Vulcans are not people who look into other species business too closely (that season one episode where T'Pol did not want to board that ship which did not answer hails). So crop circles, messages in the snow, or forest burns might not bring them closer to investigate. Maybe a huge natural disaster like a volcano blowing might, but they would not see that as a distress call about aliens invading.
I don't think Riann would know how to use subspace, but the natives could perhaps intimidate a captured alien into doing it for them. Sigh, I have the whole story outlined but this contact thing is still unclear. Okay, I do like the radio signal best, but if anyone has something else please tell me! I could always use the old flotilla of invading ships showing up the same time as a Vulcan patrol but I like the idea of a signal from the native population.
Working on a major fan fic project. Two-thirds done. Hope to put it up in the not TOO distant future.