(Regarding the preceding post, I should of course have added that comics have matured since Dan Dare and Jet Ace Logan and that Alan Moore's Miracleman graphically depicted childbirth.)
Twice the unexpected strikes on Iapetus. First, the glacier shudders, the ridge cracks and falls and the area where three explorers stand splits and topples into a depression with an avalanche pouring after it. Scobie theorises that the explorers' heat and vibrations had caused a methane layer within the metastable configuration to slide out from under them.
Secondly, when Mark Danzig flies the lander to rescue the explorers, an outburst from the glacier engulfs the vehicle which then tumbles and crashes. Scobie thinks that the glacier is a crashed comet. The heat, shock and turbulence of the impact would have scrambled molecules and momentarily generated plasmas, forming new mixtures, compounds and alloys. Danzig theorises that his jets caused some such novel substance to sublime explosively.
Minamoto comments that miscalculations and errors are inevitable when necessarily hasty decisions are made under stress. If the explorers knew what to expect, then they would not need to explore.
Hard sf encompasses both psychology and physics.
3 comments:
Kaor, Paul!
I am not sure I like the idea of excessively "mature" comic books. Because it seems to me that comics should focus on lighthearted adventure, humor, entertainment. Does everything needs to be upper case Serious and Grave?
I agree, miscalculations and errors are always going to be possible, and probable, whenever and wherever explorers goes beyond what was previously known. But that should not stop humans from leaving Earth, being willing to accept risks and dangers. It would be catastrophic if mankind was discouraged by dangers and setbacks from being willing to explore. Which was one of the points Anderson made in his grim story "Murphy's Hall."
Heck, miscalculations and errors are inevitable parts of ordinary, every day life in the safest, tamest parts of the UK and US!
Ad astra! Sean
Sean,
Any medium can have any content.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
Of course! But some types of material or themes seem to be more natural for whatever medium or genre we have in mind.
Ad astra! Sean
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