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Published: 2009-02-20 02:21:42 +0000 UTC; Views: 73587; Favourites: 686; Downloads: 3307
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[Written from the point of view of Hawk Girl ( [link] )]It was nearing sunset, so I decided that it was time to make camp and find some food. I sent Artemis off to find some rodents to eat, while I resigned myself to another meal of dried meat strips and whatever nuts and berries I could find. However, while I was gathering wood for a fire, I spotted signs of game. There was a trail of small paw prints, their spacing indicating an animal with a somewhat bounding gait, and some broken and nibbled branches and stalks. Freshly cooked meat would taste oh so much better than the dried rations I had been living on for the last several days!
I followed the trail, moving as quietly and stealthily as I could. My father, if he had still been alive, would probably have told me that I was still too loud, that my quarry would hear me and flee before I even caught sight of it. He had been a large man, tall and craggy, yet had moved with a silent grace that betrayed his Indian ancestry.
Apparently I was quiet enough, for several minutes later I came across a small clearing, with my prey browsing absently near the opposite side. Its dappled pelt, big ears, and overly long hind legs identified it as a murin. I moved quietly until I was peering around the trunk of an oak. It was nibbling at a small tangle of blackberry bushes. The berries would go nicely with its cooked meat. I calmly took my aim.
Suddenly, the breeze shifted, momentarily coming from the south instead of the north. Neither direction put me upwind of the murin, so I was untroubled. The murin, however, seemed perturbed. It turned, its long ears twitching, its snout lifting to reveal its chisel-like front teeth. I paid its reaction no mind, except to be thankful that the murin had stepped a bit closer to me. I cocked my revolver, aiming for its head.
A cacophonous crack, painfully loud, shattered the air. I thought for an instant that my gun had fired by itself, but then I saw that the murin was still standing. In fact, it hadn't moved at all. Had the gun fired, but missed? Why didn't the murin flee in terror from the loud noise? Perplexed, I went to aim again, and found that I couldn't. My limbs were locked in place. I could not even move my head. What was happening?
I heard rustling and snapping noises to the south of the clearing, where there was a dense thicket of shrubs and small trees. The murin still did not move. It was apparently as frozen as I was. Its dark eyes bulged and its sides heaved with labored breaths, but it was otherwise quite still. I noticed that I was having trouble breathing myself; my chest did not want to expand or contract.
Branches swayed as something moved through the thicket. The murin's ear twitched. There was a snap as a particularly thick branch was broken in the underbrush, and a low, ragged sound, like a breath being drawn in. The sound filled me with fear. The murin's ear twitched again, and its entire body seemed to be quaking. Its sides were heaving even more powerfully than before.
The murin's ear twitched once again, twitched twice, and then its head turned. It was as if the spell was broken. It shook the stiffness out of its legs and bounded out of view. If I hadn't been so preoccupied with my own predicament--I was still perfectly frozen, my arms and legs clenched to tightly that they were beginning to hurt--I would have cursed at the loss of a delicious meal.
The trees and shrubs swayed again, and the thing that caused their movement finally stepped out into the open. Huge and dark, long and low, its legs short and stocky, its tail stiff and thick. A borhyeen! It drew in another hissing breath as its long rectangular snout sniffed at the air. It snorted, seemingly in irritation that its prey had escaped. It glanced around and sniffed the grass in front of it, as if it were unsure what to do next. Its head was at least as large as my torso. Still frozen, I preyed that it would not notice me.
My prayers went unanswered. The breeze shifted again, this time to the west, blowing my hair into my face and my scent into its nostrils. The effect on the creature was immediate. Its face flushed a shockingly vivid blue and it drew in another growl-breath. It turned in my direction, its snout dancing in front of it. It stood on its hind legs--it would have towered over even my father in such a posture--and boomed. The air around me, the space itself around me, seemed to shatter. My muscles clenched and I felt agony. My eyes watered and my ribcage became rigid. Unable to breathe, I panicked, and a tiny breath did enter me with a choked squeak. The borhyeens small, fleshy ears, also flushed bright blue, swiveled in my direction, and its small, bright eyes met mine.
It approached me slowly, cautiously, its huge ugly head bobbing up and down as it eyed me and sniffed. Borhyeens were the most feared and despised of all animals in this part of the world, and killed whenever possible. Even this far from any town or settlement, the creature surely knew to be distrustful of people, especially people with guns. I realized that my gun was still aimed, and that if it stepped in front of me I might be able to persuade the muscles in my forearms to pull on the bones of my trigger finger. If the bullet did not kill or injure it, perhaps the gunshot would be enough to scare it off.
The borhyeen took another small step towards me, sniffed my scent and eyed me again. The tightness in my chest lessened slightly, and as I breathed more easily I felt hope. The beast took another step, and another, and was squarely in front of me. It lifted up on its hind legs again, placing its heart directly in the path of my bullet. I could not believe my luck. I furiously told my muscles to work, commanded my finger to squeeze. I let out a tiny noise, a pathetic, strained squeak, and that was all. The borhyeen lowered again and took two more steps to my left, firmly out of my firing line. It drew in another hissing, growling breath, and I imagined a mocking tone in its voice.
It took two quick steps towards me, and an involuntary, wordless sound of fright and dismay exited my mouth. I could see the fleshy barbels hanging from its turquoise chin, see its purple tongue as it licked its lips. The myriad tiny whiskers on its snout wavered as its nostrils contracted and relaxed, as if it were taking the fullest pleasure of my scent before it went in for the kill. Like my mother savoring a glass of wine. Oh God! Oh Spirits! My mother and father were dead, and I would be killed by this meanest and ugliest of beasts before I could have my vengeance on the skull-faced warrior.
A fleeting shadow passed over the ground in front of me. The borhyeen glanced up, growl-breathed again, then turned again to me, unconcerned. A moment later, the shadow passed in front of me again, and I could see what was casting it. Artemis! She clutched a small furry lump in her talons and circled, waiting for me to call her so that she could perch on my shoulder and enjoy her kill. Oh, Artemis. Now you'll be an orphan, too. I tear rolled down my cheek and I involuntarily licked it off my lips. It was several seconds before I realized what I had done.
The borhyeen was still steadily approaching me. It was now only two of its body lengths away from me, and paused again to take in my scent. My arms would not obey me, would not turn the gun to fire the bullet that could so easily kill this monster. My tongue and lips would listen, though. When told them to cry out--to shout the Vocal command that all falconers knew--they obeyed.
"Krishimenyah!!" Go for the eyes!
***
Some words about this piece:
In case you didn't know, in past ages, there were some freaking awesome animals in South America. You had Glyptodonts, giant armadillo relatives. Ground sloths the size of elephants, sloths that swam in the sea. Rodents the size of bison. Predatory flightless birds taller than a man. Giant crocodiles and snakes. Things that looked like camels, elephants, hippos, rhinos, horses, and chalicotheres, but were in fact unrelated. And, of course, predatory marsupials (or near-marsupials) that resembled foxes, dogs, bears, hyenas, and even saber-toothed cats.
Once the land bridge between North and South America formed, almost all of these amazing animals died out. A few, like ground sloths, persisted for a while, but still died out thousands of years ago. All that's left of these groups of animals are some armadillos, sloths, and opossums.
I think that these South American animals are some of the coolest things since sliced bread, so, in my magical alternate Earth, I let them live. Phorusrhacids still prowl in the amazon basin, giant glyptodonts and astrapotheres still amble around the pampas, and predatory marsupials stalk prey from Argentina to Canada. The survival of all of these groups meant that there were many more potentially domesticable animals for the indigenous South Americans. I see litopterns carrying loads on their backs, being drawn by nomads across the Atacama Desert. I see people on the backs of pyrotheres, using them just as people in Southeast Asia use elephants. I see potential civilizations arising in South America that have no parallels in our world. It's a fascinating part of my alternate Earth that I'll have to explore further someday.
Anyway, now some words specifically about these creatures. The borhyeen, as the name might suggest, is a large Borhyaenid, while the thylakil is of course a species of Thylacosmilus. Magic exists as a natural phenomenon in this world, and some animals have evolved to use it. The borhyeen has a magical roar that causes its prey to freeze in place, which I tried to use to dramatic effect in my story. The thylakil has a magical power of its own, I imagine, but I haven't decided what it is yet, and in any case it unfortunately did not appear in my story. To make these creatures more strange and exotic, and frankly just to have fun, I gave them brightly colored faces with bird-like fleshy growths. The brightness of their faces apparently is connected to their emotional state; in the story, when the borhyeen noticed Hawk Girl, its face became bright blue.
These were a hell of a lot of fun to paint, particularly the mouth of the thylakil. I found a really good reference image of a Thylacosmilus skull in the exact right position. There are exactly no images on the entire internet of a Thylacosmilus from the front, or of its entire skeleton, so I just used the skeleton of a Borhyaena as my model. The coloration of the borhyeen isn't based on anything in particular, but the coloring of the thylakil is loosely based on a water opossum. I used opossum and Tasmanian devil references for the ears, noses, mouths, etc.
The murin is a Notostylops murinus ( [link] , [link] ) a South American mammal that superficially resembled a large rabbit.
The story takes place somewhere in the eastern half of the United States, in the first half of the nineteenth century. I'm not any surer than that yet as far as the setting goes.
Some more info on the ancient fauna of South America, just in case you don't know what the heck I'm talking about:
Ground sloths: [link]
Glyptodonts: [link]
Phorusrhacids: [link]
Meridiungulates, a huge group of South American hoofed animals, all extinct: [link]
Pyrotheres, elephant-like animals: [link]
Astrapotheres, kind of like elephant-tapirs: [link]
Litopterns, kind of like camels with trunks: [link]
A South American rodent that weighed over a ton: [link]
Purussaurus, a giant caiman: [link]
Titanoboa, the largest snake known: [link]
Thylacosmilus, a saber-toothed marsupial: [link]
Tetrapod Zoology article on Borhyaenids and Thylacosmilids: [link]
Thazzit. Bye.
Related content
Comments: 115
M0AI In reply to ??? [2009-04-13 02:52:29 +0000 UTC]
I think it would be hard for Thylacoleo to NOT look good, magical or not.
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bensen-daniel In reply to ??? [2009-03-06 07:59:49 +0000 UTC]
Neat idea. I've been re-reading Germs Guns and Steel recently, and according to Diamond, having big Animals survive in South America would certainly change things. You'd have to explain why these animals fended off human predation, though. Humans in Australia killed off all the large animals there, so the South American marsupials would have problems even without a Great Faunal Interchange or a comet, or whatever it was that killed them.
Maybe it was magic
Diamond's book also has a nifty list of features an animal needs to be domesticated. I can't remember all of them, but some of them were:
herbivorous habits (no bears)
not too nervous (no antelopes)
not too aggressive (no hippos)
likes to live in groups (no rhinos)
has a hierarchical social system that humans can supplant (no rhinos...again)
has a wide range of food (no pandas)
breeds easily (no pandas...again)
but yeah, if you can get beasts of burden to the American civilizations, that would change everything! Extension of the Andean kingdoms onto the fertile pampas, a big, centralized Aztec-like empire much earlier, mongol-like nomads on the north-American prairies! Kick-ass!
( as you can see, I've given this some thought. My scenario was that the landbridge between North America and Asia never floods, and Steppe Nomads bring horses into the New World.)
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M0AI In reply to bensen-daniel [2009-03-06 19:01:04 +0000 UTC]
Thanks for the interesting comment, bensen-daniel.
I haven't read Germs Guns and Steel, but it is on my list of books that I need to look at, and I actually have seen that list of his of the attributes needed in a domesticated animal.
In my alternate South America, there are a few animals that meet those qualifications. Pyrotheres have been domesticated, and are used in much the same way that Mahouts use elephants in Asia. There are even different breeds of pyrotheres, some large for heavy work, and others smaller. Some of the larger, calmer species of camel-like and horse-like litoptern have also been domesticated, though most species are too skittish, like antelopes.
Much of the South American fauna escaped extinction at the hands of humans by evolving more reclusive, forest-dwelling forms, which live in the Amazon basin. There are even a few terror birds slinking around in there.
Your words about "mongol-like nomads on the North American prairies" really struck a chord with me. I hadn't though much about how the advanced Central and South American cultures would diffuse back into North America, and that's an interesting option.
Thanks again for the comment! It gave me a lot to think about.
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bensen-daniel In reply to M0AI [2009-03-08 16:08:35 +0000 UTC]
Well, what cultural diffusion are we seeing here? Since your people have gunpowder, I assume they can build boats, so we ought to see Old-World influence in the Americas, too. Will magic stop the plagues that killed the native Americans in our timelines?
Another good book to read is 1491. I have no idea how accurate it is and how more recent finds have changed things, but the author theorizes a much higher population of pre-contact native Americans than was previously thought. If what he wrote is true, then in a world without old-world plagues (and ref. Diamond for why your Americans should have better immunity than their cousins in our timeline), America would have been full of advanced, densely-populated civilizations. Cool stuff.
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Calpyrnia [2009-02-28 17:15:45 +0000 UTC]
WOW this is an awesome piece
of art with a great story to go with it
i like the background/concept
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M0AI In reply to whipscorpion [2009-02-27 06:46:37 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much! Both the drawing and the writing portions of this were very fun to do.
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kingacer [2009-02-22 16:40:46 +0000 UTC]
Awesome! Both the picture and the story. Can't wait to see more of this stuff.
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M0AI In reply to kingacer [2009-02-22 18:28:26 +0000 UTC]
Unless I'm struck by a rogue meteorite, see more of these you will. Thank you!
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costa-rican-dragon [2009-02-20 22:18:21 +0000 UTC]
too cool! I love metatherians and all ancient mammals!
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MetalSnail [2009-02-20 21:44:19 +0000 UTC]
great stuff, I dig the colours on the thylakil, and great story as usual
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El-Moppo In reply to ??? [2009-02-20 18:13:04 +0000 UTC]
Eeek! Great pictures! But... I think that I'm waiting until after I have had my Dinner before I read it all Though!
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M0AI In reply to El-Moppo [2009-02-20 18:23:33 +0000 UTC]
Thanks, man! Tell me what you think of the story, if you read it.
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El-Moppo In reply to M0AI [2009-02-20 18:38:13 +0000 UTC]
No problem at all! And. I shall do that!
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Azes13 In reply to ??? [2009-02-20 15:52:31 +0000 UTC]
Perhaps it's a bad sign that despite seeing the pictures, reading the title and reading the story, I only realized they were supposed to be based off South American fauna. I just kept on thinking they were based off Gorgonopsids.
As for powers for the Thylakil, a few immediately pop into mind.
-Cause magical fear. The red head and strange flanges look like a threat display. Maybe it scares off larger predators from their kills.
-Necromancy powers. A bit of a stretch, but having a creature's previous meals help it kill its prey is an idea I've always liked a magical predator to have.
-Makes the meat fall off the bones. Makes it very easy to eat things.
-Blood removal from a distance. Now I'm just being silly with magical vampire marsupial cats.
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M0AI In reply to Azes13 [2009-02-20 18:37:20 +0000 UTC]
Thanks, Azes! I've actually considered having some late-surviving nonmammalian therapsids living in this world. Perhaps a few tree-living anomodonts living in the Amazon basin, or something like that.
I like your ideas for the Thylakil's powers. I think I'll go for the magical fear one. The bright colors and flanges are definitely part of a threat display, so I think that it's only logical for its Vocal power to be connected with that.
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Azes13 In reply to M0AI [2009-02-20 19:14:43 +0000 UTC]
Anomodonts might be good. Or maybe some lystrosaurs, still wandering around or raised instead/besides pigs. I mean, if they can survive a major extinction event like the Permian Extinction, they can survive anything! (not including the things they can't survive).
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NDean In reply to ??? [2009-02-20 12:49:49 +0000 UTC]
I have no time to read it. I hate that I have no time... but what I did skim over sounds amazing. I adore your biology/magic cross
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M0AI In reply to NDean [2009-02-20 18:31:07 +0000 UTC]
Since you have no time, I'll summarize it for you.
These are descendants of South American marsupial predators. They have magical powers. The borhyeen can emit a scream/roar that causes the muscles of its prey to lock up, making them unable to move and/or breathe. In the story, Hawk Girl is hunting, and just as she is about to shoot her quarry, a huge roar rings out and she is frozen in place. The borhyeen appears and slowly approaches her. She is helpless to defend herself. She knows that the borhyeen will kill her, and that she will never be able to achieve her revenge. Finally at the last minute, Artemis (her hawk, since she's a falconer) shows up, and summoning all her strength, Hawk Girl gets her mouth muscles to move so that she can command her hawk to go for the Borhyeen's eyes. The end.
This is the first actual bit of story that I've written for this storyline.
Thanks for the comment!
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NDean In reply to M0AI [2009-02-21 12:05:45 +0000 UTC]
whoa... so, basilisk style? but without rock, just paralysis.
Nice idea.
Thats awesome, as is its name
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Deer-in-Headlights In reply to ??? [2009-02-20 11:10:58 +0000 UTC]
I love their jaws! There definately needs to be more marsupial predators in the world
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M0AI In reply to Deer-in-Headlights [2009-02-20 18:26:15 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! Very true. I think you and me should start a thylacine-cloning workshop.
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JohnFaa [2009-02-20 07:26:49 +0000 UTC]
I love how you made them colourfull. Modern marsupials, the only living metatherians, have a much better colour vision than placentals, and I think there's even a modern kangaroo specie that has glands that produce a purple colour
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M0AI In reply to JohnFaa [2009-02-20 07:37:43 +0000 UTC]
I did not know that! Very interesting. It's nice to know that my flight of fancy has some sort of basis in reality.
Thanks for the comment!
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JohnFaa In reply to M0AI [2009-02-20 08:11:50 +0000 UTC]
In addition, its quite likely to have south american megafauna being common after the formation of the Panama landbridge; before the collision of the two landmasses, South America was hitten by an asteroid, meaning that its megafauana was still recovering when the invasions took place
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M0AI In reply to JohnFaa [2009-02-20 18:21:50 +0000 UTC]
Fascinating! I didn't know that, either. So, if the asteroid hadn't hit, it's just as likely that the South American fauna would have outcompeted the North American fauna, rather than the other way around?
I think that, in my alternate Earth, that asteroid will have to miss.
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JohnFaa In reply to M0AI [2009-02-20 18:41:57 +0000 UTC]
Well, at least there would be more south american denizens, though I'm not sure meridiungulates and sparassodonts would outcompete north american critters (totally). Terror birds are doomed anyway, because they did managed to reach southern NA before the Panama landbridge was formed (presumably by island hoping)
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PousazPower [2009-02-20 06:14:39 +0000 UTC]
I like the little frills on the Thylacosmilus's jaw-flange things (do you happen to know what they're called?).
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M0AI In reply to PousazPower [2009-02-20 06:39:59 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! According to Tetrapod Zoology, "flange" is the correct term.
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thomastapir [2009-02-20 04:52:52 +0000 UTC]
My first thought when Hawk Girl found herself straining to breathe was "Sonic constrictors! Badass!" Then I started thinking that that might be a cool tactic for the Titanoboa (I love the snake, but what a lousy name...They should have called it "Ophidotitan"). You know, something analogous to its actual physical method of attack. The color change is a nice touch too, and my first assumption was that it was related to the creatures' magic abilities. I don't know, I just like the idea of correlating the magic aspects to the animals' biology as much as possible, especially considering that magic is a "natural" part of this world. I keep thinking this would make an awesome game, either a Final Fantasy kind of thing or a paper-and-dice RPG.
On an unrelated note, I am delighted to see your take on marsupial predators...I've always loved the thylacine, and thylacoleo. Ahh, maybe there are still a few of the former roaming around the Outback...I can dream, can't I?
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JohnFaa In reply to thomastapir [2009-02-20 07:25:13 +0000 UTC]
"On an unrelated note, I am delighted to see your take on marsupial predators..."
Actually sparassodonts, not true marsupials
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thomastapir In reply to JohnFaa [2009-02-20 07:43:44 +0000 UTC]
Sparassodonts are not true marsupials?
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JohnFaa In reply to thomastapir [2009-02-20 08:09:33 +0000 UTC]
Nope, just closely related metatherians.
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M0AI In reply to thomastapir [2009-02-20 07:00:13 +0000 UTC]
Thanks for the comment, Tapir!
Sonic constrictors...that's a neat idea! I imagine a creature with a constrictor-type Vocal power as emitting a drawn-out hum, the Vocal energy slowly increasing the pressure on the victim's diaphragm. Definitely a possibility for a future creature idea! I think there are nearly limitless possibilities for Vocal adaptations like that.
My borhyeen's Vocal power is more of an all-around skeletal muscle locker, with the difficulty breathing being a fortuitous (for the borhyeen!) side effect of that. Its common prey, such as the murin, seems to have a technique for escaping the muscle lock.
As for the color markings, I did add them to suggest the exotic and magical nature of these creatures, but they don't seem to be directly related to their Vocal powers. With the borhyeen, the color change seems to be part of a threat display. The slow approach, rearing up on its hind legs, and constant growling show that it was feeling highly threatened by Hawk Girl. The color changes are probably also used in intraspecific displays.
The fleshy barbels and wattles were also added to make these creatures seem less "normal." What their function is, though, I have no idea.
I'm glad you think that this world would make a great game. I think so too. Many of my fictional worlds have started out as video game ideas, actually.
Ah yes, the thylacine. The logical part of me is certain that they're extinct, but I too dream that there's still some around.
And Thylacoleo FTW! Thylacoleo is one of the most awesome predators ever. It may still exist in my magic world as well. I've already decided that diprotodonts are still around, so why not Thylacoleo as well!
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thomastapir In reply to M0AI [2009-02-21 06:17:08 +0000 UTC]
I have to say, every time I look at these creatures or read your descriptions--right back to that first sonovorous lizard--I flash on Mark Ferrari's interpretation of the Butterfly Dragon from Sandy Petersen's Field Guide to the Dreamlands (the Call of Cthulhu RPG supplement). I have an original copy of the book, but it's very hard to find now--the best online image I found is at ([link] ). Anyway, their take on the Butterfly Dragon was a creature that used SCENT to hypnotize and immobilize its prey; the narcotic potential of such olfactory abilities led to the creatures' capture and breeding as a "trophy animal" and centerpiece for the royal gardens of HPL's Dreamlands.
I know, it's one of those weird off-topic associations that has little to do with your work!, but still, it's something I think of, every time. I just had to share.
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M0AI In reply to thomastapir [2009-02-21 19:47:41 +0000 UTC]
I like hearing about your off-topic associations. That Butterfly Dragon is cool! It reminds me of an alien from a book I read. Have you read "The Jupiter Theft" by Donald Moffitt? It's the book that the Cygnan from Barlowe's Guide is from. In the book, the main characters encounter a pair of creatures that manufacture and release scents as one of their main means of communication. They release pleasing scents when the human characters do something right, and once even kill a villainous character by releasing a scent that sent him into acute allergic shock. Very cool creatures.
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thomastapir In reply to M0AI [2009-02-22 05:19:42 +0000 UTC]
I haven't read that book! I really like that idea...I'm just fascinated by the idea of any organism having a sense or offensive/defensive capability that's so "alien" to us. I've always been fascinated by electric eels and rays, bombardier beetles, carnivorous plants...I still love the Pring from the Uplift series, with their laser-ranging eye(s). Olfactory/chemical communication and attack just seems a concept with such incredible potential; I'm thinking it could be taken as far as a viral molecular program (either synthetic or naturally occurring) transmitted via scent.
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M0AI In reply to thomastapir [2009-02-22 06:42:00 +0000 UTC]
I recommend the book. It's one of the better good ol' fashion spaceships 'n' aliens sci-fi books that I've read in a while.
"I'm thinking it could be taken as far as a viral molecular program (either synthetic or naturally occurring) transmitted via scent."
This reminds me of the descolada from the sequels to "Ender's Game." I think we could trade associations and book recommendations all day!
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thomastapir In reply to M0AI [2009-02-23 18:58:55 +0000 UTC]
*snaps fingers* Descolada, that was it! I couldn't remember the name. It reminds me of...Ahh, you're right, we could do this all day. I'll send you a note instead of cluttering up your response page!
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MIKECORRIERO In reply to ??? [2009-02-20 04:25:07 +0000 UTC]
Good stuff Cody,
The subtle but obvious strength in the bones and anatomy shows in your work really well and it showcase your knowledge and educating yourself in those areas.
I think I like the one with the splash of blue a little better but they're both cool. I'd love to see your take on something "slightly" in-between these two. One that's more of a beefed up version, like the difference between your average modern day bear and the Ursus spelaeus - Cave Bears. I don't know why but I just like Hulking Brute Creatures. lol
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