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Algae planet

From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Revision as of 13:51, 1 February 2007 by Serenity (talk | contribs)
The Fleet above the Algae planet

An unnamed algae-bearing planet is the Fleet's destination after its main food stores are contaminated and its population left in a starvation state.

The planet has a debris ring, likely created from the disintegration of a small planetoid such as a moon or asteroid. The planet also appears to have seas or oceans based on its blue-green appearance. An extremely large radiation contaminated star cluster is located at least on one side of its surrounding space.

The planet has edible, protein-rich algae on the planet, as scouted by Athena.

After the Fleet manages to bring almost all of its ships through the almost-unnavigable and deadly star cluster cloud, harvest of the algae and processing begins to resupply the Fleet (The Passage).

Two weeks later, as harvesting is wrapping up, Galen Tyrol mysteriously detects the presence of the Temple of Five, built by the Thirteenth Tribe approximately 4,000 years before. The Temple is supposedly where the Eye of Jupiter is stored. The artifact is believed to point the way to the Thirteenth Tribe's destination, Earth.

Shortly after Chief Tyrol discovers the Temple of Five, the Cylons appear over the planet, seeking the Eye.

This results in the Battle of the Algae Planet.

At the end, the planet's sun goes nova, as predicted by Lieutenant Gaeta when they arrived there. The Colonial ground forces are evacuated and both fleets jump away, just as the expanding star consumes the planet. The nova ultimately turns out to be the Eye of Jupiter, and a similar nova, which occurred around the time of the first exodus, gives the humans their next clue towards Earth (The Eye of Jupiter).


Notes[edit]

  • Algae are simple aquatic organisms. Many are actually processed on the real-world Earth for use, among other things, as nutritional additives or foods.

See also[edit]

Battle of the Algae Planet