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:- '''Horta Mother'''
 
:- '''Horta Mother'''
   
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Revision as of 00:35, 4 December 2010

Horta

Horta

Spock and Kirk inspect Horta tunnel

a Horta-created tunnel

File:Schoolroom table.jpg

A Horta (above, center)

Not to be confused with the Vorta, one of the members of the Dominion.

The Horta is a silicon-based lifeform from Janus VI. It is composed of a material similar to fibrous asbestos.

Horta physiology is very different from the carbon-based norm more commonly found in the galaxy. Horta are difficult to detect with tricorders, and are invulnerable to type 1 phasers, though they can be injured with an adjusted type 2 phaser. They feed on rock, and thus they are nourished just by tunneling. Horta tunnel through rock like most humanoids walk through air, moving with the aid of an extremely corrosive acid. They leave perfectly round tunnels in their wake. This acid is so corrosive that it only leaves fragments of bone and teeth if used on a Human. Although Hortas did not evolve in an oxygen environment, they seem able to exist in it for extended periods of time.

The Horta species possesses (as compared to carbon-based lifeforms) an unusually long life-cycle. Every 50,000 years, all of the Horta die out except for one, the so-called mother Horta, who then watches the eggs until they hatch and mothers and protects them. Horta eggs are spherical in shape, and they seem to mostly consist of silicon, aside from a few trace elements. They are stored in the Vault of Tomorrow in the Chamber of the Ages.

It was in the midst of one of these temporary phases of extinction that the Federation colonized Janus VI in the 2210s. The mother Horta tolerated the Federation presence up until the miners established a new, lower level in 2267, where they first encountered Horta eggs. Thinking them nothing more than a ball of useless silicon, the miners' automated equipment destroyed thousands of them. The mother Horta defended her children by carrying out actions of sabotage and murder against the Janus VI colony.

Horta eggs

Horta eggs

It was only when Commander Spock of the USS Enterprise mind-melded with the mother Horta that he was able to determine that the Horta was actually an intelligent lifeform. In fact, before the discovery of the Horta, silicon-based life had been thought a fantasy by Federation scientists.

The mother Horta reached an accord with the miners, who were distressed at the destruction they had caused. The miners would leave the Horta alone on the lower levels once they began hatching, while the Horta would use their abilities to locate and construct access to choice mineral deposits for the miners. Just as the Enterprise departed the planet, the first baby Horta hatched and began tunneling rapidly. (TOS: "The Devil in the Dark")

Information about the Horta was displayed by the computer as an okudagram graphic in Keiko O'Brien's schoolroom on Deep Space 9. (DS9: "A Man Alone", "The Nagus")

Appendices

Memorable Quotes

"NO KILL I"

- Horta Mother


"I'm a doctor, not a bricklayer!"

- Leonard McCoy

Background

  • The Horta was played by Janos Prohaska. Some new CGI visual effects were created for the Horta for the 40th anniversary of the original series. Notably the Horta emerging/tunneling through the rock face when Captain Kirk encountered the Horta mother on his own was a combination of new and original footage.
  • The "suit" for the Horta, also with Prohaska inside, first appeared in the final episode of the original ABC series The Outer Limits. Titled "The Probe" (with Peter Mark Richman), the episode's storyline was about survivors of a plane crash in the Pacific waking up to find themselves (and their liferaft) on the floor of an alien spacecraft sent to collect terrestrial life forms. In this episode, broadcast in January, 1965, the future Mrs. Horta was performing yeoman service as a giant cold germ threatening the hapless Earth people.
  • According to the text commentary for Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home by Michael Okuda, "Two days before the filming of the Federation Council chamber scene, it was requested that it include a Horta ambassador. However, due to the short notice for the request, it was impossible to create a Horta in time for filming, and the Horta failed to appear in the film."
  • The German word "Hort" (male gender, der Hort) means hoard (as in hoard of treasure or supplies). In some regional dialects, the word's meaning is extended to include "all-day nursery" - a place where you "hoard" children, fitting the role the Horta has.

Apocrypha

Although there is no current canon reason to believe the Horta ever left Janus VI, in several non-canon novels and comic books by Diane Duane there is a Horta crew member on the Enterprise, Ensign Naraht – in particular, Naraht plays a critical role in The Romulan Way. The novel Articles of the Federation by Keith R.A. DeCandido has the Horta as members of the Federation as of 2380 and are represented by one Councilor Sanaht. Further appearances include the Greg Cox and John Gregory Betancourt's DS9 novel, Devil in the Sky. Hortas were also mentioned in The Lost Years.

In the TNG novel, Dyson Sphere, it is revealed that Starfleet has starships crewed entirely by Horta. These ships are of standard design with nearly all amenities removed, and filled with solid stone, which the Horta can reshape as they see fit.

The series of non-canon Star Trek: Titan novels also has a male Horta character, Chwolkk, who serves as an engineer on the USS Titan.

External link

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