T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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27.1 | | ORPHAN::LIONEL | | Tue Feb 14 1984 19:17 | 5 |
| I've been a Piers Anthony fan ever since Macroscope, and then a superfan
when I discovered his Xanth series. Not all of his work is attractive
to me (such as Ox/Orn, and the Tarot worlds series), but most of his
books (and there ARE a lot of them) are delightful.
Steve
|
27.2 | | PULSAR::ATLANTA | | Tue May 08 1984 17:11 | 3 |
| Now, I enjoy the Xanth stories, but you have to admit,he can get
carried away with his play on words. It's hilarious to the point of
thinking 'Please stop this, I want to think sanely for a while!!!'
|
27.3 | FANTASY - GREAT | RDGE00::ALFORD | Garfield rules !! OK ? | Fri Apr 24 1987 13:37 | 10 |
| Fantasy can live for ever, in my opinion, GIVE ME MORE.
I love the Xanth series, a wonderful bit of witty, slightly
mad bit of escapism......
Any opinions on Anne McCaffry's dragons -- great, wish I had
one. I eagerly wait for more from her pen - not just the
dragons.
CJA
|
27.4 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Fri Apr 24 1987 13:43 | 4 |
| I like authors who 'crossover' the 'line' between the
two and do it well. I like 'hard sf' ala Niven and
some fantasy. My personal fave is Poul Anderson for
those reasons.
|
27.5 | McCaffery's Dragon novels are not fantasy | CURIUS::LEE | nota bene | Mon Jun 01 1987 19:17 | 12 |
| >Any opinions on Anne McCaffry's dragons -- great, wish I had
>one. I eagerly wait for more from her pen - not just the
>dragons.
I've heard Anne McCaffery speak and she flatly denies that the dragon
novels are fantasy. She sets those novels on a distant planet that
was settled by humans and then forgotten, large due the disruptions
of the first threadfall that they experienced after landing. The
origins of the dragons has much more to do with science than with
fantasy, but saying more would be a spoiler of sorts.
Wook
|
27.6 | McCaffery's dragons were an experiment | SMAUG::RESNICK | IBM Interconnect Engineering | Tue Jun 02 1987 14:50 | 6 |
| I seem to remember reading some place that McCaffery's reason for
writing her first dragon story was to see if she could come up with
a line of "scientific" reasoning behind dragons (that is, explain
dragons in the manner of science fiction, rather than fantasy).
Michael
|
27.7 | Enquiring minds want to know. | LDP::BUSCH | | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:26 | 21 |
| < Note 27.6 by SMAUG::RESNICK "IBM Interconnect Engineering" >
< a line of "scientific" reasoning behind dragons (that is, explain
< dragons in the manner of science fiction, rather than fantasy).
While re-re-reading "The Hobbit" it occurred to me to ask the following
questions in this file. What sort of "explanations" could one come up
with to explain the ability of dragons to breath fire. In talking it over
with a friend at lunch, it was suggested that the dragon might be constipated
and the backed up flatulence, in trying to escape, had to vent itself via the
path of least resistance. If the dragon happened to grind its teeth, the sparks
thus created might truly ignite the (mostly methane) gas.
Any more serious suggestions?
Another problem I see with most of the dragons pictured in bestiaries and other
works of art lies in the aerodynamic design of the beasts. Usually, their wings
are positioned FAR too much forward of where their apparent center of gravity
is. (Unless, hmmmm.... no that can't be. Methane is not lighter than air.)
Dave
|
27.8 | More on Dragons | MILVAX::SCOLARO | A keyboard, how quaint! | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:42 | 15 |
| Methane is most definately lighter than air. If memory serves the
molecular weight of methane is 16 (12 for the carbon and 1 for each
of the 4 hydrogens) and the molecular weight of "air" is about 29
(air is about 80% nitrogen, molecular weight 28 and 20% oxygen,
mollecular weight 32).
I have also heard it proposed that dragons manufacture hydrogen
and use it for both flame and bouyancy. Since flame color associated
with dragons is red, I am not sure either methane or hydrogen could
be the cause. Look at a gas stove, the flame color is BLUE! Wood
burns with a nice red/orange color, as does your stove when the
water boils over (the water changes the flame chemistry so that
the color shifts to red/orange.
Tony
|
27.9 | Dragons is herbivorous! | LDP::BUSCH | | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:48 | 5 |
| Is methane mostly a byproduct of the digestion of vegetable or animal matter?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought that it came from vegetable matter.
Dave
|
27.10 | See the Dragons of Pern | AUTHOR::KLAES | Kind of a Zen thing, huh? | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:58 | 7 |
| Although I have not read the series, I believe the DRAGONRIDERS
series by MacAuffrey gives a "scientific" explanation for flying,
fire-breathing dragons such as the kind conjured up from the Middle
Ages.
Larry
|
27.11 | It could be for real! | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Mon Mar 28 1988 17:07 | 8 |
| In Dragonriders the dragons chew (appropriately enough) 'firestone'
which creates the gas. I disremember where the spark comes from,
though I vaugely remember it being catalytic. There are a number
of chemical reactions that liberate hydrogen when minerals are placed
in sulfuric acid (stomach acids).
Willie
|
27.12 | This looks like a job for Speedy Alkasel...(tm) | LDP::BUSCH | | Mon Mar 28 1988 18:23 | 9 |
| < Note 27.11 by SNDCSL::SMITH "William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith" >
< There are a number of chemical reactions that liberate hydrogen
< when minerals are placed in sulfuric acid (stomach acids).
I thought that stomach acid was mostly hydrocloric, but then, what do I know
about dragons.
Dave
|
27.13 | re: .7 - Checkout "Glory Road" by Heinlein... | VIDEO::GUENTHER | | Tue Mar 29 1988 10:21 | 5 |
|
Heinlein had that method, though I think the flame was ignited by
a catalyst.
/alan
|
27.14 | Draconian Chemistry | RSTS32::WAJENBERG | Celebrated ozone dweller | Tue Mar 29 1988 10:30 | 28 |
| According to a book I read a few years ago, the flight and fire
mechanisms are related. Dragons have spines growing from their
vertebrae into their stomachs. There, the calcium carbonate of the
bones interacts with the hydrochloric acid to generate hydrogen.
The stomach forms a huge bladder of warm hydrogen, giving the dragon
the bouyancy necessary to fly. It also explains the somewhat blimp-
like outline of most depicted dragons.
As a weapon and as a territorial/threat display, the dragon belches the
hydrogen out while clashing its teeth to produce the spark needed to
ignite it. Of course, this means that a lot of flaming grounds the
dragon.
Dragons, alas, are not herbivorous. They need to eat high-calorie
food, i.e. meat, to maintain their active lifestyle and to avoid taking
on too much weight to fly. They also need to each the bones to supply
themselves with the calcium carbonate for their own hydrogen
production.
Finally, and as an aside, their treasure-hoarding is similar to that of
jackdaws. The males collect large quantities of shiny things to
attract the females. Unfortunately for both species, so do humans.
I believe source book for all this was entitled "The Flight of
Dragons," but I do not remember the author.
Earl Wajenberg
|
27.15 | That explains Elliot. | LDP::BUSCH | | Tue Mar 29 1988 12:24 | 17 |
| < Note 27.14 by RSTS32::WAJENBERG "Celebrated ozone dweller" >
< The stomach forms a huge bladder of warm hydrogen, giving the dragon
< the bouyancy necessary to fly. It also explains the somewhat blimp-
< like outline of most depicted dragons.
This in not how JRRT painted Smaug in "The Hobbit". He (Smaug) was definitly on
the svelte side, perhaps from having lain more or less dormant for so long.
Considering the "desolation of Smaug", he either had to have lain dormant for a
long period, or else he had to roam far and wide for his plunder and food. The
men of laketown stated that it had been more than a generation since he had been
a menace to them in anything more than memory.
Another fine point, and one which is just an observation and not one which
troubles me, is that it would take an enormous volume of gas to buoy a dragon.
Consider the size of hot air balloons or blimps in relation to the actual
payload they support.
|
27.16 | Are you sure it was calcium carbonate? | WOOK::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Tue Mar 29 1988 18:54 | 7 |
| re: .14
Aren't bones made of calcium phosphate? Wouldn't calcium carbonate
and hydrochloric acid produce carbon dioxide? Any chemist out there
that can confirm this?
Wook
|
27.17 | Acetylene? | LDP::BUSCH | | Wed Mar 30 1988 10:10 | 12 |
| < Note 27.16 by WOOK::LEE "Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W'" >
< -< Are you sure it was calcium carbonate? >-
< re: .14
< Aren't bones made of calcium phosphate? Wouldn't calcium carbonate
< and hydrochloric acid produce carbon dioxide? Any chemist out there
< that can confirm this?
Sounds right to me. Perhaps dragons require a daily dose of calcium carbide.
When mixed with water, it produces acetylene gas. What a blast.
Dave
|
27.18 | all that glitters... | ASIC::EDECK | Support Your Local Shoggoth | Wed Mar 30 1988 12:07 | 9 |
|
Here's a thought:
If the dragon secretes a lot of HCl in it's stomach, it could use
ANY metal it ate to generate Hydrogen. Gold wouldn't react
to generate Hydrogen, of course, (I refuse to consider an aqua regia
based dragon!), but the dragon might mistakenly munch down an
occasional tiara or diadem or two along with the other metal it
scavenges during it's foraging.
|
27.19 | Chlorox the Dragon Killer | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Mar 31 1988 17:30 | 14 |
| The book referenced earlier where this explanation came from is
by Peter Dickinson. It is indeed called "The Flight of Dragons".
It dates from around 1979. The author is apparently quite ignorant
of basic chemistry (as well as the problem of getting hydrogen from
applying acid to bones, there's the fact (already noted, I believe)
that hydrogen burns with an almost colorless flame, unless contaminated
with something else). The calcium carbide route seems more reasonable
except that acetylene doesn't offer much in the way of lift. Worse,
acetylene and chlorine for an explosive mixture that detonates
spontaneously upon exposure to light. So a great way to blow up
a dragon would be to feed it some Chlorox...
len.
|
27.20 | Gas+Wings+Will=Flight | IND::MENDES | Free Lunches For Sale | Fri Apr 01 1988 14:55 | 13 |
| A dragon doesn't have to get all its lift from the hydrogen or methane
it might generate during the digestive process. It does have the
wings. The combination of light gases and wing action could be
sufficient.
Another consideration is how fast the wings move. Hummingbirds can
remain suspended by moving their wings very fast. Also, some years
ago, the conventional wisdom went that bumblebees were aerodynamically
unable to fly, but being ignorant of this fact, proceeded to do
so anyway. Apply enough power, and a rock can fly, and the hell
with the density, design, and other factors.
- Richard
|
27.21 | Regarding Bumblebees and Dragon(flie)s | WOOK::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Fri Apr 01 1988 18:29 | 8 |
| As I recall, bumblebees (and dragonflies oddly enough) rely on
turbulance from the front pair of wings to increase the lift of the
second pair, so for a dragon to exploit that technique, it would have
to have two pairs of wings.
Just a thought.
Wook
|
27.22 | | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:33 | 23 |
| I went back and read the section in Dickinson's book on how dragons
fly (while the book purports to be authoritative, I consider just
"one man's opinion"); he claims that dragons' stomach acid reacts
with calcium (not calcium carbonate or calcium phosphate, but rather
metallic calcium) to generate hydrogen which provides both lift
and flaming breath. He leaves unexplained where the calcium comes
from; the skeletal structure obviously, but how does it get reduced
to metallic calcium?
Also, it seems to me that the reaction of calcium with the water
diluting the hydrochloric acid in the digestive fluids would also
produce calcium hydroxide as well as calcium choride, and that
some of the calcium hydroxide would react with the HCl to produce
more calcium chloride and more water. Where does all the calcium
chloride go, and given a reasonable concentration of HCl in the
digestive fluids, how much hydrogen could be expected?
Regarding hummingbird-like wing flapping; the energy expended would
be enormous (hummingbirds, like most very small animals, have very high
metabolisms); could a dragon's metabolism support such an expenditure?
len.
|
27.23 | | IND::MENZIES | | Mon Apr 04 1988 16:29 | 9 |
| Wook- Did you look _under_ the first pair of wings? :-)
Metallic calcium would be more efficient than calcium combined with
something else in an acidic reaction, but I'm hard put to think
of a credible source. But what the heck, if a dragon can come up
with raw calcium to convert to hydrogen, it ought to be able to
figure out how to generate enough energy to make like a hummingbird!
- Richard
|
27.24 | Wanted individuals for research mission | RAVEN1::TYLER | Try to earn what Lovers own | Wed Apr 06 1988 04:39 | 6 |
| Well I think we should stop all this speculation and just go and
get us a dragon. We could ask him/her for the answers but if they
were not very cooperative we would just kill them.
;-)
Ben
|
27.25 | I'll go | CFACOM::WESSELS | It's more a guideline than a rule... | Wed Apr 06 1988 13:46 | 4 |
|
Ok, let's employ a thief to round out our party to 14, and go.
Dwalin
|
27.26 | | OPUS::BUSCH | | Wed Apr 06 1988 18:08 | 10 |
| < Ok, let's employ a thief to round out our party to 14, and go.
Is that 14 octal or hex?
Bilbo Busch
|
27.27 | Keep Writing!!! | RAIN::WELCH | Suk 'em! | Fri Jul 01 1988 15:54 | 12 |
| Back to Piers Anthony...
Xanth was good, but far from his best. Another two series had me
running to the bookstore every time I heard a rumor a new volume
was out:
- Bio of a Space Tyrant (5 vol.)
- The Apprentice Adept
-John
Asimov + Anthony = I never get any work done.
|
27.28 | rumors? | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Sun Jul 03 1988 01:31 | 9 |
| speaking of "Tyrant", any rumors of the 6th volume mentioned in the
epilogue of #5? That is, the diary of Hope's sister.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
27.29 | Follows the mold wonderfully... | SANS::WILLARD | NETsupport Maint. Mgr., Atlanta | Tue Jul 05 1988 09:50 | 7 |
| I finished the latest ADEPT recently and found it to be enjoyable.
It was a little stale due to the fact that there are only a limited
number of possibilities in the 'World' he created and Piers has
about used them up. It was predictable... but I still enjoyed it.
RE: _Apprentice Adept_ Piers Anthony
|
27.30 | Anthony (over) does it again! | ANKH::KIRSCHBAUM | Insert Something Clever Here | Tue Jul 05 1988 10:10 | 8 |
| re: -.1&-.2
I agree that Anthony tends to beat his story ideas to death. I
thought the original Apprentice Adept series was among his best.
I don't like his new ones so much as they are just re-dressing
the same plot with a SLIGHT (and none-too-clever) change.
Andy
|