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ArthurBlue β€” The Sub-Oasis of Lyra 8

Published: 2017-10-25 22:56:25 +0000 UTC; Views: 33160; Favourites: 1258; Downloads: 721
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Description

When the first settlers arrived to this exoplanet all they found was a barren landscape.


The whole world was covered with a gigantic desert, scattered with unusual faceted rocky hills. Fortunately, some of the probes found a few pockets of water under the sand, in some scattered places. Encouraged by this find, more probes were sent.

The settlers then established colonies in and around these pockets of water, like the two cities we see in the image. After a complex process of water purification, they planted there some tropical species they brought from old Earth, thereby recreating oasis-like environments. Soon, someone started calling them "sub-oasis", since they were below ground level.

The cities are interconnected by large multi-purpose tubes, hosting a high-speed public transportation and forced water circulation (to balance the water level between cities).
The search for more pockets of water still continues. Until now, they've established 27 of these cities on the surface of this planet.

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Note: this image is for sale as NFT at knownorigin.io/gallery/8055000…

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Other related images from my gallery (more on each below):
The Rooftop Gardens of Lyra 7:


Hidden Garden:


The Colony of Sigma Draconis:



This image is a kind of sequel of my other image "The Rooftop Gardens of Lyra 7", link above.
In Lyra 7, I imagined gardens way above the ground, even above the clouds. Then I thought: why not the other way around too? Then this idea of gardens below the ground, and how and why they would exist, came to my mind. And now it's in your minds too.

This is the 2nd time (at least) that I make an image with vegetation below the ground (maybe I made more, I'm not sure). I remember this other one, "Hidden Gardens", link also above. Maybe you'll find more...

I made these structures loosely based on another set I made for the image "The Colony of Sigma Draconis", link above.

As always, the image was rendered in Vue in a 3D digital world, without painting or photo-manipulation (many people think I paint or use photos to build my images - I do neither).

EDIT: I can tell that there is a man, standing, somewhere in the structure. I wonder if anyone can see him? He's probably just 2 or 3 pixels tall in the image... But in the real world scale of the image, he's 1.8 meters.

EDIT: in the link below you can see where the guy is and have a real impression of the city scale:



EDIT: I made a kind of "making of":

Related content
Comments: 76

ArthurBlue In reply to ??? [2017-10-26 20:01:47 +0000 UTC]

Thanks.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

firefysh1140 In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-27 04:58:22 +0000 UTC]

You are most welcome.Β 

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

SerenityFeueropal [2017-10-26 07:05:20 +0000 UTC]

Makes me crave a full story about the settlers and their technology. Great work!

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to SerenityFeueropal [2017-10-26 20:03:08 +0000 UTC]

Thanks. I would like that too.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

Polyrender [2017-10-26 07:01:18 +0000 UTC]

That's quite the scene.Β  Was the terrain made in World Machine or Geocontrol?Β  The erosion looks like something out of one of those.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to Polyrender [2017-10-26 20:03:42 +0000 UTC]

Thank you, old friend. Yes, it was made with WorldMachine.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 2

hairyskeleton In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-27 03:10:34 +0000 UTC]

Is it still possible to find a copy of WorldMachine somewhere and learn how to use it?

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to hairyskeleton [2017-10-28 10:49:40 +0000 UTC]

Sure, there's a demo download page and some tutorials here: www.world-machine.com/ (in fact, I made the terrain in this image a long time ago while I was playing around with the demo version).
You can find more tutorials in www.geekatplay.com

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

hairyskeleton In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-28 18:26:46 +0000 UTC]

Thanks, I'll take a look.Β  Β  Β Β 

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

Polyrender In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-26 21:22:51 +0000 UTC]

Nice.Β  I've got that too but haven't used it in ages.Β  Still use Vue for BG work mostly.Β  It's just I invested a FORTUNE on video cards (3 X GTX-1080) and water cooling which work GREAT for DS Iray.Β  Do nothing for CPU rendering.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to Polyrender [2017-10-26 21:38:47 +0000 UTC]

I have a 7 year old computer with some noisy rusty fans. It's an old i7 from one of the first generations. The only new things in it is a GTX950 (only one) and a HDD, both bought when the old ones died. I've thought several times to buy a new system but I've resisted the temptation so far. After all, it's working fine for my needs. And Win10 gave it a new life, to be honest. It's much faster and stable now than with Win7.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

Polyrender In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-27 12:51:07 +0000 UTC]

Very interesting.Β  Glad it is working for you, though fans are cheap to replace.Β  Win 10 has caused me some grief, in particular with input devices such as my wireless keyboard and mouse.Β  On 2 separate PCs with the same keyboard & mouse sometimes keystrokes do nothing, sometimes there are massively long delays before a character shows up on screen.Β  I recently bought a Huion graphic tablet (my old one would not work on Win 10) but I couldn't get it to work reliably so I shipped it back and got a refund.Β  I may try a Wacom.Β  Sometimes I think I should upgrade Vue since I'm still using Vue 8 complete.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to Polyrender [2017-10-27 20:55:53 +0000 UTC]

I avoid wireless peripherals as much as I can. They're often a source of problems (electromagnetic interference that come and go depending on what's nearby, extremely hard to trace and debug). Moreover, a wireless mouse is typically heavier than a wired one, meaning more inertia, meaning less precision. And you have to worry about charging them, another hassle. The wires don't really bother me and they're more reliable.
I don't have a graphic tablet, never felt the need for one for my workflow.
Yes, you definitely should upgrade your Vue. There has been massive changes since Vue 8.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

Polyrender In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-28 10:51:41 +0000 UTC]

Thanks.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

Norski In reply to ??? [2017-10-26 02:45:43 +0000 UTC]

Nice work. And plausible enough. (Serious) planning for long-term stays on Mars often take this general approach.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to Norski [2017-10-26 20:07:27 +0000 UTC]

Thank you. I'm passionate about science-fiction and I do like that the "science" part is plausible, even if only remotely. Even when I don't write about it, I always try to justify for myself how and why this and that detail could come to be.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

slowdog294 [2017-10-26 00:18:57 +0000 UTC]

Fascinating.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 2

ArthurBlue In reply to slowdog294 [2017-10-26 20:07:38 +0000 UTC]

Thank you.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

slowdog294 In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-27 02:06:26 +0000 UTC]

Many welcomes.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

GolliatTaillog In reply to slowdog294 [2017-10-26 01:49:04 +0000 UTC]

This.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

Na-Komete In reply to ??? [2017-10-26 00:18:19 +0000 UTC]

Giving me big Traveller x Chris Foss vibes

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to Na-Komete [2017-10-26 20:15:41 +0000 UTC]

I had to google both up but I think I know what you mean. Thanks, that's an honor.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0

RSeer [2017-10-25 23:15:42 +0000 UTC]

Awesome! OK, I can see you heading toward sci-fi short-story writing.Β Β 

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

ArthurBlue In reply to RSeer [2017-10-26 20:09:26 +0000 UTC]

Thanks! Well, english is not my native language, so I can only hope to dabble a bit.

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

RSeer In reply to ArthurBlue [2017-10-26 22:11:20 +0000 UTC]

Hey, if you can write those great descriptions, maybe you should try β€œdabbling”. Just saying.Β Β 

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 0


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