Scorched Earth (Stargate SG-1)
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Stargate SG-1 episode | |
---|---|
“Scorched Earth” | |
Episode no. | Season 4 Episode 9 |
Guest star(s) | Brian Markinson as Lotan Marilyn Norry as Hedrazar Alessandro Juliani as Eliam Rob Court as Caleb Nikki Smook as Nikka |
Writer(s) | Joseph Mallozzi & Paul Mullie |
Director | Martin Wood |
Production no. | 409 |
Original airdate | August 25, 2000 |
Episode chronology | |
← Previous | Next → |
"The First Ones" | "Beneath the Surface" |
"Scorched Earth" is an episode of the science fiction television series Stargate SG-1.
[edit] Plot
After several months of searching, Stargate Command finally locates a planet suitable to the unique requirements of the Enkarans. The Enkarans were suffering from the effects of radiation, so they need a planet with a high ozone concentration.
However, two weeks after resettling the Enkarans on their new planet, SG-1 discovers that an alien ship is terraforming the planet, making it suitable for a sulphur-based life form. These changes will kill the carbon-based Enkarans, when it reaches their village the following day. The Enkarans refuse to leave, since they are too many and because there is no other planet they can settle on.
After General Hammond refuses to grant the ammunition required to mount an offensive against the enormous vessel, Jack O'Neill decides that their only option is to try and communicate with whatever lifeforms might be on the ship. SG-1 sets up a radio transmitter and within a short space of time they are transported onboard the alien vessel.
They are greeted onboard by a biomechanical lifeform generated by the ship to appear in the image of the Enkarans. The creature calls itself Lotan. He explains to them that the ship was built by the last of a now-extinct race known as the Gadmeer.
The Gadmeer were a 10,000-year-old, highly advanced and peace-loving people, overcome by a stronger military power. Rather than embrace extinction, the Gadmeer filled the ship with genetic samples of its race, and of plants and animals from their world. The ship's computers were filled with all the knowledge, art, music and philosophy of the Gadmeer. The ship's computer was programmed to search for the most suitable planet where the Gadmeer civilization could be reborn. Now that the terraforming process has started it can't be stopped because there is not enough energy to start on a new planet. So the team is caught in the position of deciding whether to help the Enkarans or let the spaceship terraform the planet.
Jack O'Neill is adamant that the Enkarans be saved but Daniel Jackson remains convinced that there is a way for both races to survive. Whilst Daniel goes back to try and convince the Gadmeer to find another planet to terraform, O'Neill tries to devise a way to launch an attack on the ship. After much hesitation, O'Neill orders Major Carter to convert the Naqahdah generator, which was going to power the Enkarans city for the coming year, into a Naqahdah bomb which will detonate when the ship passes the location of it.
Meanwhile Daniel convinces Lotan to see the Enkarans and to see what he will destroy. Although Lotan agrees that he doesn't want the Enkaran civilization to be destroyed, he has to follow his program and so the terraforming continues. However Daniel is finally able to convince Lotan to stop the terraforming temporarily, shortly before the ship reaches the village of the Enkarans. The halt allows the ship to avoid the detonation of the Naqahdah bomb.
It is revealed that, while searching for a planet suitable for the Gadmeer, the spaceship had located another planet that would be well-suited for the Enkarans. The planet was rejected as a suitable candidate for the terraforming process for three reasons:
(1) The planet was too large for the ship to terraform due to its limited supply of raw materials
(2) The planet had a core temperature too high and, as the planet the SGC moved the Enkarans to was quite cold, this would only benefit the people
(3) There were already intelligent lifeforms on the planet. As it turns out, this planet is the original Enkaran homeworld.
The team manages a compromise that satisfies both sides. The alien ship will carry the Enkarans back to their homeworld, which has no Stargate, and the ship can return and continue with its terraforming. Jack sarcastically says in reference to Lotan "and he's mentioning this now?", to which Daniel responds that he didn't know, and "technically he is only a day and a half old". Lotan then decides to stay with the Enkarans since he was created in their image.
[edit] Notes
- The Enkarans were first mentioned (albeit in passing) at the beginning of "Watergate".
[edit] External links
- Official Stargate SG-1 site. MGM. Visited June 8, 2006. Most of site requires Flash.
- Screenplay (PDF). Distributed by MGM. Prepared by Casablanca Continuity (2000-08-07). Retrieved on 2006-10-15. Linked to from Official Stargate SG-1 site. Also see Google's cache.
- Summary from GateWorld. Visited May 7, 2006.
- Review from GateWorld. Reviewed by Debra Kraft. Visited May 7, 2006.