vargr muscles and stuff
Timothy Collinson
(26 May 2018 19:48 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Thomas Jones-Low
(26 May 2018 20:03 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
David Shaw
(26 May 2018 20:15 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Timothy Collinson
(26 May 2018 20:49 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
shadow97218@xxxxxx
(27 May 2018 10:46 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
David Shaw
(26 May 2018 20:08 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Thomas RUX
(26 May 2018 22:32 UTC)
|
Re: vargr muscles and stuff
Rob O'Connor
(27 May 2018 01:12 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Tim
(27 May 2018 04:00 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Timothy Collinson
(27 May 2018 10:02 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Bruce Johnson
(27 May 2018 22:16 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Michael Houghton
(27 May 2018 22:29 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Kelly St. Clair
(27 May 2018 22:36 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Bruce Johnson
(28 May 2018 15:52 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff shadow@xxxxxx (30 May 2018 07:46 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Timothy Collinson
(30 May 2018 10:30 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Bruce Johnson
(30 May 2018 16:41 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
David Shaw
(28 May 2018 00:50 UTC)
|
Re: [TML] vargr muscles and stuff
Phil Pugliese
(28 May 2018 11:38 UTC)
|
On 27 May 2018 at 18:29, Michael Houghton wrote: > Are you thinking of Derek Lowe, whose blog includes a category "Things > I Won't Work With", which includes some compounds with way too many > nitrogen atoms jammed in. For example: > > http://blogs.sciencemag.org/pipeline/archives/2011/11/11/things_i_wont > _work_with_hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane Reading thru the comments there's a lovely bit wondering how much of this stuff organisms have to accumulate before they go "boom". Which led me to the thought of a *major* storage depot for that compound (it is a possible rocket fuel) lost during the long night. Local critters breached the facility and some (probably fungi or bacteria) started eating it. They'd be able to get a fair bit of energy from metabolizing the nitro groups. But that leaves the hexaazaisowurtzitane part. Something that eats them might accumulate that. So here's some slow moving critter without many defenses. Has to be slow moving because and fast moving critters that evolved the trick tended to explode while moving. Probably evolved a bright color pattern, as there defense mechanism of goping "boom!" when attacked doesn't work well if predators don't have a warning sign. (Maybe the oloration is a byproduct of some other compounds in the storage depot that fungi and bacteria have been eating?) So Our Heroes encounter these (lets say) bright purple critters sort of like a furless sloth. Thety move slowly, don't seem to be afraid of large animals and eat these weird colored growths spread over the area. (they thrive on the seepage from the buried storage depot into the local water table) At some point either someone kicks one out of the way, throws a rock at it or something similar. And it goes *boom*. Like it had TNT for bones or some such. Yay. Walking land mines... -- Leonard Erickson (aka shadow) shadow at shadowgard dot com