dinosize: (6)
Stephen Hart ([personal profile] dinosize) wrote2014-08-13 05:25 pm

05th anomaly ; video ; open

Have you ever wondered what comes next? Evolutionarily. After humans.

[ Stephen is in his own cabin, a light and airy space that doesn't really seem to suit him. The camera is propped up on the edge of a sink, where he's washing out blood and dirt from the clothes he wore while out in the port.

He's not really looking at the camera. ]


Do you think humans could ever be a food source for another animal?
with_my_teacup: (Vogue!)

[personal profile] with_my_teacup 2014-08-14 04:26 pm (UTC)(link)
So far wherever human colonization has put a foothold and kept it, they've been the apex predator or wiped out the competition. But places where they couldn't take control are easy to spot. Abandoned buildings. Bones. No second try.

Nothing's come up on Earth, in my time. But Earth's climate controlled and regulated.
with_my_teacup: (Default)

[personal profile] with_my_teacup 2014-08-15 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Basically, yeah. There's no tolerance for real competition. Out on the fringes, survey crews get eaten, fugitives on the run never resurface. But humans make a habitat theirs or they abandon it in my time. Anything that was going to use human as a standard part of its diet is going to have to be real good at space travel.
with_my_teacup: (Chilling)

[personal profile] with_my_teacup 2014-08-16 10:40 pm (UTC)(link)
My gut tells me anything that could do long term predation on humans would have to be extremophilic or sentient. Maybe both. But a gut instinct isn't science.

...bacteria, maybe, count. Nasty fatal ones that haven't been stamped out most planet-- and those do tend to be extremophiles too. Able to survive sterilization procedures.