Difference between revisions of "lead"
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Known in antiquity on [[Earth]], lead was element 82 on the periodic table and had an atomic mass of 207.19.<ref name="MRM"/> On [[Stardate]] [[2266#SD1312|1312.4]], [[Starfleet Ranks#Lieutenant|Lieutenant]] [[Kelso, Lee|Kelso]] discovered that critical components of the [[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701|U.S.S. ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701]]'s [[impulse drive]] had "decayed to lead" and were in danger of catastrophic failure.<ref name="TOS01"/> | Known in antiquity on [[Earth]], lead was element 82 on the periodic table and had an atomic mass of 207.19.<ref name="MRM"/> On [[Stardate]] [[2266#SD1312|1312.4]], [[Starfleet Ranks#Lieutenant|Lieutenant]] [[Kelso, Lee|Kelso]] discovered that critical components of the [[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701|U.S.S. ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701]]'s [[impulse drive]] had "decayed to lead" and were in danger of catastrophic failure.<ref name="TOS01"/> | ||
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Revision as of 11:48, 14 May 2021
Known in antiquity on Earth, lead was element 82 on the periodic table and had an atomic mass of 207.19.[1] On Stardate 1312.4, Lieutenant Kelso discovered that critical components of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701's impulse drive had "decayed to lead" and were in danger of catastrophic failure.[2]
Notes and References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Palestine, Eileen and Geoffrey Mandel (Editors). Star Fleet Medical Reference Manual. Star Trek. Book. Originally published by Star Fleet Productions, Inc.. Ballantine Books. 1977.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Cage". Star Trek, season 0, episode 0 (Production number 01). Directed by Robert Butler. Written by Gene Roddenberry. Released 1986. Desilu Productions. 1965.