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Museum of Exoplanetary Archaeology: Exoplanetary Archaeology, #1
Museum of Exoplanetary Archaeology: Exoplanetary Archaeology, #1
Museum of Exoplanetary Archaeology: Exoplanetary Archaeology, #1
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Museum of Exoplanetary Archaeology: Exoplanetary Archaeology, #1

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Heading for Mars this weekend? Stop by New Toronto, Colony 7 to enjoy the Museum of Exoplanetary Archaeology. Because there's more to Bradbury Ward than Asimov Park! And consider purchasing this full-color guide, which highlights more than 30 exhibits representing civilizations hundreds of parsecs distant and thousands of local cycles old. If you're searching for intelligent life on Mars, look no further than this lavish introduction to the splendors of Coalition space!

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 11, 2022
ISBN9798201277833
Museum of Exoplanetary Archaeology: Exoplanetary Archaeology, #1

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    Book preview

    Museum of Exoplanetary Archaeology - David Petersen

    Partial Funding for the permanent exhibition is provided by:

    And by Local Council, your voice in the Coalition.

    Main Level: A Look Back at the Early Collection

    Exhibit No. 4

    Depiction of a fertility goddess (?) with antigravitational base, no obvious power source. Provenance unknown. This enigmatic addition to the collection was rescued from Neo-Corsairs by the Antiquities Recovery Unit at the NTMEA. 

    Exhibit No. 5

    Depiction of a unique organic find (collagenic plant tissue with similarities to tetraodontidae and hippocastanaceae) discovered at Fibonacci Beach, Kepler 62E. Grand Tentacles layer, circa 1.2 million local cycles B.T.

    Exhibit No. 6

    Depiction of a component from an unknown device (tantalum substrate with tellurium plating) Spontaneous photovoltaic conversion requires caution. Mandelbrot Marshes, Tau Ceti f. Metropolis layer, circa 700 local cycles B.T.

    Exhibit No. 7

    Depiction of a

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