In the meantime, here's something a friend and I have been working on for awhile...
This is another of our school oceanography "genius time" projects. If you never read the nothosaur post, basically what happened is we were set loose once a week to research or put together any project we wanted, so long as it was ocean-related. There have been some really cool ones, like a Minecraft underwater city and a to-scale paper model of a megaladon jaw. My last one was rather disappointing, so my friend Amanda Schroeder and I decided to team up and create an alien ecosystem.
The planet's called Aduro, and so far, we've mostly focused on the water-related aspects of it for the sake of the class. However, we've got a good dozen other drawings of flora and fauna dwelling on the landmasses, which we plan on editing to perfection and eventually incorporating into the final project. What we've got now is the animals in and around the ocean--microfauna, fish, coastal creatures, and shorebirds--and a basic outline of the planet. Here's some of the pictures from the Prezi presentation we put together, and a little of the back story on each:
Aduro: My drawing, Amanda's editing |
Here's a map of the world. There's three main continents (Matir, Insula, and Hex from top to bottom), each with a separate species of humanoids (except Matir). The little dot in the center of Insula is a crystal island formed from the glowing photoprotein nitor that is the basis of the world's food chain. We have yet to figure out exactly how nitor circulates through the systems of the world, but we have come up with ways in which it influences life in the oceans. The crystal isle is one of them. Another is the mangrove island (the little dot on the far right, near the equator). The mangroves grew over a shard of landmass that floated out to sea after Insula originally broke up, and the trees put down roots that anchored it to the seafloor. Those mangrove trees are now fed entirely on nitor particles from an underwater hydrothermal vent, and the animals living on the mangrove island subsequently ingest a lot of the photoprotein through eating the fruit of the mangroves:
Juvenile plant person: Amanda's drawing |
Glowmonkey: My drawing, Amanda's editing |
Draenost merperson: My drawing |
Veneriferous Merperson: Amanda's drawing |
This last one is my favorite. It is the Silent Ikking Fish, and no one knows what ikking is, save that this fish does it silently.
Silent Ikking Fish: My drawing |
My thanks to Amanda, who can brainstorm, draw, and photoshop like none other. I'm pretty sure this is the coolest project I've ever had occasion to do in school.
To my readers, I hope you found this interesting (though not exactly applicable in the real world). Keep an eye out for any future posts, and as always, happy reading!
S.R. Koch.