Phoenix Logs/Forerunner/Forerunner Control Tower: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 22:33, February 26, 2019
- Multi-purpose control structures
- As the Ark's name suggests, it was designed to play host to an incredible
- variety of life collected from across the galaxy. This almost inconceivable volume
- of biodiversity necessitated a flexible environmental system on the Ark as the
- Forerunners prepared for the galactic reseeding of life after the Halo Array was
- activated.
- On a practical level this meant that all habitable surface area on the Ark could
- be covered in an environment to match any life-sustaining planet in the galaxy.
- Atmospheres, soil and vegetation makeups, bodies of water or other liquids,
- and even gravitational conditions could be custom-set in areas as large or as
- small as needed to sustain collected specimens from a particular planet.
- These environmental settings were accomplished through a network of Control
- Towers. These towers worked essentially like the output nodes of modern
- mass-particle replicators or the archaic 3D printers of the 22nd century,
- generating kilometers-deep environments around them through manipulation
- of raw materials stored deep within the superstructure of the Ark. The base of
- each tower then generated desired gravitational conditions.
- When an environment was complete, only a small percentage of each Control
- Tower remained visible above ground in order to minimize interference with the
- new local wildlife while still allowing for data gathering on the surrounding area.
- Today, these Control Towers lie mostly dormant. But with new visitors to the
- Ark and the possibility of new uses for the Ark's scientific and military
- capabilities, the towers offer literally world-building power to whoever controls
- this ancient installation.