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  #41  
Old June 18th, 2004, 04:51 AM

Baron Munchausen Baron Munchausen is offline
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Default Re: [OT] Short sci-fi story: The Lifeboat

Quote:
Originally posted by dogscoff:
Very interesting link TC. Kind of makes you wonder, what did all that genetic diversty look like before the near-extinction. Or to put it differently, what would humans look like now if all those lost genes had survived into the present? Would there be whole new ethnic Groups? Blue skin and purple hair? Cow-print colouring with elephant ears? Who can say for sure?

I rememebr a while back they found some 5-thousand year old preserved corpse in a glacier of a peat-bog or something and found that (somehow) it had viable sperm. Maybe this is all urban myth but apparently hundreds of womed were queueing up to get impregnated by this fossil, and the scientists refused them all on ethical grounds. Quite rightly so, I might add- imagine going through school with that stigma hanging over your head "Hey Cave-boy, where's your Daddy?" Not to mention the Scott Evil complex- "I wish I'd never been artificially created in a lab."
However it would be incredibly interesting to see the results. The temptation on those scientists- the curiosity must have been quite something to resist.
Gack! You are actually reading those tabloid magazines in the supermarket or something? There are all sorts of crazy 'urban legends' about Oetzi the iceman, found in the Alps between Austria and Italy. You can easily find out the truth by Googling on 'Oetzi':

http://www.crystalinks.com/oetzi.html

BTW, genetic testing shows that Oetzi is in fact related to the current inhabitants of the area.
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  #42  
Old June 18th, 2004, 10:18 AM
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dogscoff dogscoff is offline
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Default Re: [OT] Short sci-fi story: The Lifeboat

Yeah OK, I guess that was kind of far-fetched. Not as crazy as you might think though, considering some of the stuff scientists get up to. I remember seeing a documentary about a crazy japanese guy who launched all these expiditions because he was determined to find a glacierized mammoth and jurassic-park the species right back into existence by breeding mammophants of increasingly pure mammoth extraction. Nutter... although seeing a real live mammoth would be cool. (Unfortunately, I woulnd't get to, because with elephant/ mammoth gestation times he was looking at almost a hundred years to get a pure mammoth.)

[ June 18, 2004, 09:26: Message edited by: dogscoff ]
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  #43  
Old January 18th, 2005, 02:39 PM
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Default Re: [OT] Short sci-fi story: The Lifeboat

Desperate attmpt to resurrect this story. Remember anyone can join in and write something.

*********************************************

It was decided by vote that the Last apple should go to Kodwo. Not because of the patriarchal status his advanced age gave him among the people with whom he had arrived, or even because of the wisdom and agricultural knowledge that had proved invaluable to the greater community since his arrival, but because he was ill, and he could probably use the vitamins. He would accept little else in the way of medicine- not that there was much to offer- and he insisted on attending the nightly meetings by the fire, despite his shivers, sweats and coughing. It was only a cold, and Kodwo was only sixty-two years old, but his years weighed far more heavily upon him than they did on some of the western refugees of similar age.

The Groups looked on reverently as Kodwo ate the piece of fruit- itself almost as wrinkled as he- until only the seeds remained. These he kept carefully. Even if they or any of the others planted over the Last month or so should grow into mature trees, it would be years before they yielded fruit, and everyone was aware of that fact as they watched Kodwo wipe his mouth in satisfaction and tug his blanket tighter around himself, shuffling closer to the fire with a long, rattling cough. The vast majority of human infections had been left behind on Earth, but a few had been carried onto the new world, and they had all spread quickly throughout the colony's limited population. The coughs and colds had barely slowed most people, but some had been more vulnerable than others. Surprisingly, one of the most problematic illnesses had proved to be one of the most benign. Within a fortnight of arrival, at least half the Groups were exhibitting symptoms of athlete's foot. Outraged, and at the peak of forced nicotine withdrawal, Maggie had demanded to know who had brought it from Earth, and why they hadn't shown a little consideration by trying to prevent the spread of the condition. No-one admitted it, and Maggie had rounded on Steve, who she disliked anyway. According to her, he was the only person in the group inconsiderate enough to do something like that, and the affair had escalated quickly into a shouting match before Ruth had stepped in, defused the situation and arbritrated some frosty apologies.

"Tomorrow, my grandson Kwame will go on the bicycle and plant these apple seeds on the south west border of the forest," said Kodwo, extending his fist to the adolescent, then unfurling his fingers to let the apple seeds drop into Kwami's outstrecthed palm.
"Why should we plant them right on the border?" Asked Graeme. "We have plenty of space nearer the camp, I think we should plant them with the other fruit trees to the north of the parsnip field."
"It will be the beginning of a road." Said Kodwo, definitively. He pointed a bony finger to three metal poles sticking upright out of the ground. "The space people told us where to find the third village. We must begin to build a road."
The only things of their own the aliens had left behind when they left were the metal rods the old man had indicated. The shortest one was the "centre" pole. According to the aliens, if you drew a straight line from the centre pole to the second tallest, and then extended it by about ten miles, you would reach the other lakeside settlement. Graeme and Kwami had proved this correct a month earlier on the mountain bikes. A line from the centre pole to the tallest pole, which pointed roughly south west, would, apparently, lead directly to the settlement two or three thousand miles away on the far side of the continent. Most of the refugees had complained bitterly about the imprecision of this instrument, given the technologies available to their space-faring saviours. Kodwo, however, rarely complained about anything.
"We must contact our fellows to the South West, just as we contacted the village on the lake. It is a long way away, so we must build a road."
"Kodwo," began John, "I agree that it would be nice to find the others, but we have too many other ways to spend our time and energy. The village to the South West is thousands of miles away. It's too far to walk or to cycle, even on a road, especially without any sources of food between here and there. "
"I have considered this." Replied Kodwo, almost immediately. "We will line the road with trees, so that travellers upon it will not go hungry."
"And what if we misjudge the line?" Asked Graeme, reasonably. "Even if we grow your trees, which would take years, and then build your road, which will take even longer, we can't possibly carry a dead stright line over those distances. Even a few degrees of error at this end could put us tens or hundreds of miles off course at the other."
Kodwo, however, was adamant.
"The space people will have left poles for the other village. They will be building a road of their own, and we must meet them half-way. If the line is not straight, we will find them anyway by the smoke of their fires. If this takes many years to do, then we must start as soon as we can. Tomorrow, Kwami will plant these seeds in the direction of the line. The apple was given to me, and the seeds are part of the apple." And that was an end to it.

The following morning, using more sticks carefully lined up with the first two, they extended the south-west line and determined the exact direction of the road. Following this line to the border of the great scorched circle that surrounded the camp. The entire community went there, and between them they soon cleared the native plants in the appropriate place, laying two great trunks in two parallel lines that would mark the boundaries of the three-metre wide road. Alongside the logs, Kwame planted six apple seeds, three on each side of the road, and lovingly poured some water on them. Finally he bowed his head and wept, for beneath the first of the six seeds lay the body of his grandfather Kodwo, who had died in his sleep overnight.
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