Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Of Pine, Fungus, and Light

universe entire with-you
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When asked about transportation to their site, Efret emphatically swore off speeders of any variety. She also expressed reservations about luggabeast, musing about the ethics of their creation and livelihood, but also acknowledged that they couldn't carry their supplies out into the middle of nowhere and back without one.

She did refuse to personally ride it though, instead leading it through the desert with a lot of slack. Holding one side of its reins forced her to sign with one hand. She hadn't switched off the small translating unit pinned to the neckline of her tunic since leaving the junker market where they had rented the beast of burden. Regardless of if Elias knew sign or not, she was facing away from him.

The lapel pin projected a constant grid of fine, green lines at her hand to track its movements, then interpreted the signs' meaning in a voice that was warmly but mechanically feminine.

"Billions of years ago, Jakku was heavily forested. The biodiversity was very profound, as evidenced by the amount of fossils already found. There's a large collection of them at the local temple. Have you seen them? One must do a lot of travel to different museums and geological archives if they want to study Jakkuvian paleoecology, since there has been only one, or two if you are of a particular school of thought, species that has been repeated in the currently known record. That's to say, every fossil that has been found so far has been different. Isn't that fascinating?"

Efret paused, looking over at Elias to let him speak or sign should he want to. If he chose to speak, she would read his lips to understand.

Outfit + equipment; lapel translation clip (currently switched on); lightsaber (green blade color)

Elias Edo Elias Edo
 
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Tides of Change
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Tags: Efret Farr Efret Farr
Location: JAKKU

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The sands of Jakku parted around the toes of Elias’ boots as he walked a short distance behind Master Farr. He wasn’t opposed to riding the luggabeasts, but with their companionship in its infancy he didn’t want to risk offending her. The last few months had been hell on his body, making him feel a good ten years older than he really was, but he didn’t mind the trek. It was good to stay active. Walking kept his mind focused, alert.

Jakku wasn’t an overly dangerous world. At least that much was going for them. All the life they’d come to see was long dead, fossilized and buried beneath the dunes. It was the heat and risk of dehydration that threatened them, but they had plenty of water and Elias had donned the poncho that Romi Jade Romi Jade gifted him.

It certainly attests to Jakku’s history,” Elias remarked, signing with semi-fluency as he spoke. He’d learned a good bit of the language from Tarus Undara Tarus Undara when they were Knights, but it turns out that signing wasn’t like riding a bike; there was a great deal he’d forgotten since his friend had passed.

He was just as eager to pick up Lorrdian again as he was to explore Jakku’s biosphere.

One specimen each, with none repeated?- it’s certainly odd. Lots of implications from such a pattern. What do you make of it?
 
universe entire with-you

Efret smiled to herself. Seeing someone sign never failed to make her happy. It wasn't something that happened all too often in her chosen life unfortunately, so she never took it for granted when it did. What’s more, Elias was using Lorrdian sign language. That was even more of a treat; she hadn't used it herself in some time, but it was still entirely comfortable to her—using one's native language was like coming home, even when far, far away from the place.

I’m not a paleobotanist, so I don’t have a proper hypothesis, but I do wonder something,” she admitted. Typically, she wouldn't disclose an idea which was nothing more than a what-if, especially when there were so many equally plausible possible explanations, but a fellow master was asking. "As I’m sure you know, fossilization is a very selective process. Only about one percent of all living things get preserved.

Still, one would expect species to be repeated in the rock record at least once. The deep-sea sediments of Kamino, for instance, show a long history of mammal and plant life that flourished before the planet flooded. There are many specimens of the same species to be found there. So why not here?

What I wonder is if the rate of evolutionary change between there and here was different.” Her lips pulled bunched to one side of her face like a purse string, a thoughtful expression. “If old species became new species fast enough, the opportunities for the former to fossilize would have been even further limited. It could explain the pattern.

Elias Edo Elias Edo
 
Tides of Change
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Tags: Efret Farr Efret Farr
Location: JAKKU

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Interesting,” Elias answered. “Kinda scary, too.” The words came faster than he could remember the gestures, but Elias would eventually attempt each sign. Some were choppier than others but still understandable enough for Efret not to feel totally lost.

Evolution takes hundreds of thousands of years to make meaningful progress… entire generations of life should be preserved, even with such a small fraction of them actually forming tangible fossil evidence. Right?

Elias was by no means a true scientist or paleontologist, but that was the (perhaps redundant) conclusion he’d drawn. It wasn’t much more than an observation on its own, but it did serve well to support Efret’s theory. Elias raised an eyebrow as he contemplated things a bit further.

Rapid evolution certainly happens, but on a planetary scale? It’s fascinating,” he said after a moment of reflection. It made the objectively dull task of trekking through sand and rock incredibly exciting; if only they could peel back the desert, gather its samples, and tuck the dunes back into place. Not because he dreaded the process, but because he was so eager to see what histories the fossils were waiting to tell.

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universe entire with-you

Efret laughed in agreement. "Scary for sure," was her only comment until he finished his piece. She did a lot of trance and illusion work informed by Force echoes in ancient objects to imagine, and interact with, the past. It was always an illuminating and humbling experience to walk as the Order's ancestor had, but sometimes it was more unsettling or outright terrifying than it was fascinating.

All knowledge came at a price. If she could pay it even if it was scary so that she could disseminate discoveries to the New Jedi, she very gladly would.

"Yes, I think so. Genetic change that creates something unrecognizable but still the same? Unfathomable. It would require global environmental change to drive it." Efret turned her face up to the clear blue sky, trying to see the possibilities up there. An atmosphere choking with ash or raining fire and bits of asteroid, or swirling with temperate storms. "A sustained pattern verging on atmospheric and geologic catastrophe." She looked back at Elias and smiled shyly. She knew that it sounded improbable, especially when communicated to another. "It's only an idea."



A few more minutes of walking brought them to another bend in the wide but shallow ephemeral stream that they had been loosely tracing through the desert. Nothing about this stretch of landscape appeared special, but Efret evidently sensed its possibility as she handed the rein to Elias and all but bounded across the streambed. She approached the steeply sloping ridge of stone on the other side and knelt down in the shadows it cast. She next lowered her back towards the sand, pushed her hands posed in a chevron like a high diver into the grains, and pulled her fingers apart to expose her palm. Silica poured into the bowl she had created. She took it into the air, finer particles already beginning to spill back onto the ground through the seam of her hands, bowed her head, and breathed in.

Somewhere beyond the smell of desert heat and earth was that of a lost narrative she was sure she and Elias would find here should they dig deep enough.

 
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Tags: Efret Farr Efret Farr
Location: JAKKU

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There wasn’t a cloud in the sky above their heads, something Elias still wasn’t quite used to yet. Genetia had more ocean than solid ground, and what little it did have was either smaller than one person could stand on and stay dry, or was really just a shallow sandbar blanketed by a quilt of mangroves. The concept of a planet devoid of rainfall and storms, no tidal waves or ocean spray… he supposed it would have been just as strange for a Jakku native to see as it was for him to miss.

He looked to Efret, who was observing the same sky as he, but was reading a much different story.

"A sustained pattern verging on atmospheric and geologic catastrophe. It's only an idea."

It’s a good one,” he said with a reassuring smile. And he meant it, too; Elias wasn’t one to agree just to make nice with new faces. Efret’s train of thought was sound, and even though he was no expert, he couldn’t suggest a better antecedent to the dunes that sprawled around them.

A geological event certainly has the potential,” he said, remembering one of the worst of Genetia’s storms. More temperate worlds have systems to name their storms, but such a practice would be impossible on a world where hurricanes are a near-weekly occurrence.

But the one he was recalling now? It most certainly had a name- Te āwhā nui, the Great Storm. Dark clouds blotted out the sun, churning and rolling like smoke. Lightning jolted through the sky. He remembered the ocean, how angry she was, tossing and turning against the metal structure that kept Maataua City high above the surface. He was young then, only a child, but he’d never forget the wrath his beautiful world could muster.

Elias shuddered, solemnly repeating himself. “Yes, certainly a potentiality.

Luckily for both his mind and his feet, they came upon something that set Efret off in a way that made Elias grin. She was a reserved woman, calm and gentle, but there was something about the sands here that excited her senses. He was trying to remember the signs to ask what she’d found before she was off with haste to investigate. He picked up his own pace and followed, reaching her just as she tossed a handful of loose sands into the wind.

He smirked a bit. “Find something?

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