Mars: Difference between revisions
TimeLord11 (talk | contribs) No edit summary Tag: 2017 source edit |
TimeLord11 (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary Tag: 2017 source edit |
||
Line 141: | Line 141: | ||
==== 25th century ==== | ==== 25th century ==== | ||
[[File:Daleks attack Mars.jpg|thumb|The Daleks land on Mars. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Invasion of the Daleks (comic story)|Invasion of the Daleks]]'')]] | [[File:Daleks attack Mars.jpg|thumb|The Daleks land on Mars. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Invasion of the Daleks (comic story)|Invasion of the Daleks]]'')]] | ||
Around [[2400]], Mars had only a single, small colony and was the birthplace of [[Space Army]] Commander [[Vel Karneen]]. The [[Dalek]]s invaded the solar system and Mars was their third target. Everyone in the colony was killed in three [[hour]]s. Karneen had been offworld and led the Space Army against the Daleks. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Invasion of the Daleks (comic story)|Invasion of the Daleks]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Secret of the Mountain (short story)|The Secret of the Mountain]]'', ''[[Break-through! (short story)|Break-through!]]'') Later, the Daleks used [[Humanoid (Dalek creation)|"Humanoids"]] for an ambush on Mars. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Humanoids (comic story)|The Humanoids]]'') | Around [[2400]], Mars had only a single, small colony and was the birthplace of [[Space Army]] Commander [[Vel Karneen]]. The [[Dalek]]s [[2400s Dalek invasion of the solar system|invaded the solar system]] and Mars was their third target. Everyone in the colony was killed in three [[hour]]s. Karneen had been offworld and led the Space Army against the Daleks. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Invasion of the Daleks (comic story)|Invasion of the Daleks]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Secret of the Mountain (short story)|The Secret of the Mountain]]'', ''[[Break-through! (short story)|Break-through!]]'') Later, the Daleks used [[Humanoid (Dalek creation)|"Humanoids"]] for an ambush on Mars. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Humanoids (comic story)|The Humanoids]]'') | ||
[[Darzil Carlisle]] was born on Mars just outside [[Olympus Mons]] in [[2414]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Game (audio story)|The Game]]'') | [[Darzil Carlisle]] was born on Mars just outside [[Olympus Mons]] in [[2414]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Game (audio story)|The Game]]'') |
Revision as of 15:42, 16 October 2023
Descriptions of its temporal flux from Going Once, Going Twice and Marticide need to be added
These omissions are so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Check out the discussion page and revision history for further clues about what needs to be updated in this article.
- You may wish to consult
Mars (disambiguation)
for other, similarly-named pages.
Mars (also known as Sol IV) was a planet in the solar system, inhabited by the Gandorans, the Ice Warriors, the Martians from The War of the Worlds, another race sometimes known as the Meercocks, a viral species known as the Flood, and at multiple points, by human colonists.
Mars existed in "several hypothetical realities in the same dimensional space during the very same epoch", (PROSE: The Ninnies on Putney Common) largely because of the War in Heaven. (PROSE: Going Once, Going Twice)
Features
Mars was a terrestrial planet. (AUDIO: Feast of Fear)
Only Mars, Peladon and Laylora contained deposits of the valuable ore trisilicate. (TV: The Curse of Peladon, PROSE: The Price of Paradise)
According to the Fifth Doctor, Mars had gravity which was "about a third" of the sorts of planets the human, Peri Brown, was used to. Its surface was powdery and dark red in colour. Mars had roughly a four-minute radio delay from Houston on Earth. (AUDIO: Red Dawn)
According to Daniel Llewellyn, Mars was 50 million miles away from Earth in December 2006. (TV: The Christmas Invasion) The Tenth Doctor and Yuri Kerenski described the distance from Bowie Base One on Mars to Earth as 40 million miles in November 2059. (TV: The Waters of Mars)
As the Eighth Doctor recalled, before Mars had become "devoid of life", Mars had snow-capped green hills. (AUDIO: The Creed of the Kromon) Plant life on Mars included flowers (TV: The Waters of Mars) and winter berries. (PROSE: Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks)
Martian soil was slightly alkaline and contained vital nutrients. (TV: The Waters of Mars)
History
Remote past
The Fourth Doctor theorised that, around 12 million BC, the Fendahl passed from Planet 5 to Mars on its way to Earth, before the Time Lords trapped its homeworld in a time loop. (TV: Image of the Fendahl) This phenomena became known as the Great Death in Ice Warrior history. (PROSE: GodEngine)
At some point in its past, Mars was home to many civilisations, but eventually the Gandorans were the last one left. (AUDIO: Lords of the Red Planet)
After defeating and pacifying the Fighting-Machines of Planetoid 50, the Doctor deposited them on the surface of ancient Mars so they could develop away from the Master's influence. (AUDIO: The Martian Invasion of Planetoid 50)
The age of the Ice Warriors
The race later known as the Ice Warriors were created by the Gandorans as a slave race to serve them. (AUDIO: Lords of the Red Planet) At the height of their civilisation, they became peaceful, honour bound beings who were artisans as well as builders. They hunted only for food and never fought one another and thus never experienced any form of war. (AUDIO: The Judgement of Isskar)
Accounts differ as to the downfall of the Ice Warriors, with some mentioning being at their peak and active thousands of years BC, (TV: Cold War, Empress of Mars) and others claiming their atmosphere to have been destroyed "centuries" before the 21st century, (AUDIO: Red Dawn) or even millions of years BC. (AUDIO: Deimos)
Whilst favouring colder climates, they populated the equator of Mars; their shell-shaped buildings were designed to reflect heat. In this period, their world was vibrant and alive. Water was plentiful and there were canals on the planet. The Martians lived in peace for twelve thousand years. This civilisation was shattered when a segment of the Key to Time was discovered by time travellers. Its removal led to the creation of a gravity well that devastated the planet.
For the next three decades, the civilisation was devastated by climatic changes. Some among the Martians managed to get off world, beginning the the Abandonment of Mars. Those still on Mars fought among themselves for food and shelter, becoming a warrior race. After another thirty years, the energies from the stolen piece of the Key to Time were spent and the ground settled. The remaining Martians emerged onto their world to rebuild their civilisation. (AUDIO: The Judgement of Isskar)
However, it was the Ice Lord Izdaal who discovered that the damaged atmosphere meant that ultraviolet radiation led to many of their children being sickly. He declared that Mars was no longer capable of supporting life but was ignored. He stood before the "Red Dawn" and was killed by the radiation. This showed that the world was dying. This led both to the salvation of the race as well as their transformation into a conqueror species. (AUDIO: Red Dawn, The Judgement of Isskar)
According to the Twelfth Doctor, Mars' atmosphere had "all but evaporated", and the surface was "lifeless" before 1881. He told Iraxxa that the Ice Warriors could not survive without help. Friday agreed with the Doctor. (TV: Empress of Mars)
At some point prior to his travels to ancient Mars, the Fifth Doctor was surprised that there were Ice Warriors still around by the 21st century; he assumed they "all" left Mars after its atmosphere thinned "centuries" before the 21st century, while Lord Zzaal said the Ice Warriors had discovered "primitive, early life" developing on Earth before his people went into suspended animation. (AUDIO: Red Dawn) The Eighth Doctor dated this time as "many millions of years" before the 23rd century. (AUDIO: Deimos)
By human prehistory, the Ice Warriors already possessed spaceflight. With their ecosystem dying and becoming more inhospitable, the Ice Warriors, led by Varga, sent an expedition to Earth, but the ship crashed and was frozen in a glacier where it would remain for millennia. (TV: The Ice Warriors)
At some point, the Ice Warrior Hives were created as a colony for the Warriors. (TV: Robot of Sherwood)
The Osirans
Around the 8th millennium BC, the last flowers on Mars died out. (TV: The Waters of Mars)
Around 5000 BC, the Osirans reached Mars and set up underground bases beneath pyramids that they built. Sutekh was imprisoned in a tomb in Egypt and kept in a state of paralysis by an energy beam transmitted from the main pyramid on Mars itself. A warning message, Beware Sutekh, was broadcast continually by radio. (TV: Pyramids of Mars)
Pre-colonisation period
19th century
In 1881, Colonel Godsacre of the British Army discovered a crashed Ice Warrior ship in the South African veldt on Earth with a hibernating Ice Warrior inside. Named Friday by Godsacre, the Ice Warrior promised Martian jewels to the colonel and his men if they would help Friday repair his ship and return to Mars. Unknown to the humans, Friday actually intended to awaken his hive and Queen Iraxxa. The ship crashed on Mars, stranding the soldiers who used one of the Ice Warrior vessel's weapons repurposed into the Gargantua to dig for jewels.
Having learned of the message "God Save The Queen" hidden under the northern Martian ice cap in 2017, the Twelfth Doctor, Bill Potts and Nardole travelled to Mars to investigate, but the Doctor's TARDIS unexpectedly returned to Earth with Nardole inside and unable to get it to return to Mars, stranding the Doctor and Bill on the Red Planet. Meeting with Friday and the soldiers, they learned of the recent events as the hive was finally uncovered. When Jackdaw inadvertently awoke Iraxxa, conflict broke out between the two sides until Godsacre killed the treacherous Captain Catchlove and got Iraxxa to make peace. The Doctor contacted Alpha Centauri who promised to send a fleet to rescue the Ice Warrior survivors from Mars. The Doctor, Bill and Godsacre created the message that had led the Doctor and Bill to Mars in the first place and then departed in the TARDIS after Nardole was able to return with Missy's help. (TV: Empress of Mars)
Early 20th century
In 1903, after receiving a wealth of information from the future, Grigori Rasputin foresaw, among other things, men on Mars. (AUDIO: The Wanderer)
In 1911, Laurence Scarman picked up the Osirans' signal on his marconiscope. That same year, Sutekh escaped from his ancient bonds. (TV: Pyramids of Mars)
On 30 October 1938, many humans across the United States took Orson Welles' radio adaptation of H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds literally, and believed that Martians had really invaded. (AUDIO: Invaders from Mars)
Later 20th century
Several accounts held that humanity landed on Mars long before its colonisation in July 2058. (TV: The Ambassadors of Death, PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy, The Dying Days, UNIT History: Fighting the unknown, AUDIO: Red Dawn) The Tenth Doctor indicated otherwise. (TV: The Waters of Mars)
Mars was a target of a series of British manned space probes overseen by the British Space Centre (a renamed British Rocket Group) and constructed with International Electromatics technology. (PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy) The first Mars landing happened within a few years of the American moon landing. This was a source of pride for the British public but made the national debt worse, and future historians like Bernice Summerfield would remember this as a doomed attempt by Britain to show it could still be a great power. (PROSE: The Dying Days)
Mars Probe 6 and Mars Probe 7 made contact with a group of peaceful, radioactive humanoids. Another spacecraft, Recovery 7, entered Mars orbit to determine what had happened to earlier probes. (TV: The Ambassadors of Death) UNIT's involvement with the missions helped to establish their reputation. (PROSE: UNIT History: Fighting the unknown)
According to one account, an international mission to Mars shortly after led to contact with the Zoltans, which was made public knowledge and led to a media frenzy. (PROSE: Soldiers from Zolta)
In 1977, Britain's Mars Probe 13 astronauts accidentally wandered into the city of the Argyre Clan Ice Warriors and were slaughtered after they spied on a research facility. To appease the Ice Warriors, the British government's representative, Minister Edward Greyhaven, had mission commander Alexander Christian framed for the astronauts' deaths and imprisoned. He agreed to ensure humanity would not return to Mars. For the next two decades, the British secret service spread what was, according to one account, disinformation, that Mars was uninhabitable and sabotaged NASA data in order to discourage Mars missions. This account claimed Mars' atmosphere was breathable, (PROSE: The Dying Days) though other accounts showed Mars to be long-dead with an unbreathable atmosphere to humans and Time Lords by the 21st century. (AUDIO: Red Dawn, TV: The Waters of Mars) Though he was able to breathe on the surface, according to Lord Zzaal, even without the threat of the red dawn, the low temperature and loss of water following the thinning of the atmosphere would mean an Ice Warrior could only survive for a few days. (AUDIO: Red Dawn) Yet another account had the Twelfth Doctor describe Mars' atmosphere as "all but evaporated" and unsuitable for Martians to survive in without help as early as 1881, which Friday agreed with. (TV: Empress of Mars) As a result of Greyhaven's plot, Britain would have little scientific or technological achievements to show for the Mars Probe missions. (PROSE: The Dying Days)
In 1994, Joseph Rennigan, a lone human astronaut marooned on desolate and lifeless Mars, found himself aided by unseen friends, namely the First Doctor and his companions Susan Foreman, Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright. (PROSE: Rennigan's Record)
In 1997, Britain returned to Mars with the Mars 97 mission — a deliberate plan by Greyhaven and Argyre Clan Lord Xznaal to give the Ice Warriors a pretence for a "retaliatory" conquest of the United Kingdom, with Greyhaven placed in power as a Prime Minister. When it turned out the Ice Warriors were using him for a pretext to wipe out and areoform Earth, Greyhaven wiped out the Argyre's nests on Mars with the Mars 97 Orbiter. Xznaal was defeated soon after by UNIT and the Eighth Doctor. (PROSE: The Dying Days)
At some point, a probe found Martian DNA and took it back to Earth. This helped create the hybrid, Tanya Webster. (AUDIO: Red Dawn)
21st century
Circa the dawn of the 21st century, a space expedition funded by Leo Webster arrived on Mars in the Argosy to find an Ice Warrior and use it to create a clone army augmented by Ice Warrior biology and technology. The Argosy crew arrived in the tomb of Izdaal, whose guards were awoken from suspended animation. Paul Webster tried kidnapping Sub Commander Sstast, but the Argosy was shot down by the Ice Warriors. He tried escaping in the Ice Warriors' rocket with the Fifth Doctor and seventeen-year-old Tanya Webster as hostages.
Lord Zzaal allowed the Doctor and Tanya to escape Paul while Zzaal sacrificed himself to the ultraviolet rays of the sun. With Zzaal no longer in mortal danger, Sstast fired a sonic charge at Paul, killing him. Tanya stayed behind on Mars to became an ambassador for Earth. (AUDIO: Red Dawn)
On 31 October 2006, the Guinevere One was launched from Britain for an intended landing on Christmas Day, but was intercepted by the Sycorax. (TV: The Christmas Invasion)
On 31 July 2008, the NASA probe Phoenix confirmed the existence of liquid water on the planet. (TV: The Waters of Mars)
In 2010, a NASA probe landed on Mars. Sarah Jane used Mr Smith to shut it down before it got too close to an Osiran pyramid. (TV: The Vault of Secrets)
In 2017, while the Twelfth Doctor and Bill Potts were visiting NASA, the agency discovered the "God Save The Queen" message hidden under the northern polar ice cap. The discovery prompted the Doctor, Bill and Nardole to travel to Mars in 1881, ultimately causing the chain of events that led to the message being made in the first place. (TV: Empress of Mars)
One version of the Ninth Doctor felt that he found the first man on Mars, circa 2019, to be one of his favourite events in history. (PROSE: Who's After Your Cash)
On 31 December 2020, the Mars rover Leonardo from the European Space Agency, monitored by John Wilcox, uncovered a copy of David Bowie's Life on Mars on the surface of Mars. Wilcox believed it was a prank by his colleagues. (PROSE: Life on Mars on Mars)
On 24 May 2027, it was reported that the British government was conducting further Mars research. (AUDIO: A Death in the Family)
While the Tenth Doctor identified the Bowie Base One colony in 2058 as the "very first humans on Mars", an obituary of Adelaide Brooke mentioned that a three-person team including Brooke landed on Mars in 2041, when Adelaide was 42. (TV: The Waters of Mars)
In July 2058, Bowie Base One, the first human colony on Mars, was established, staffed by an international crew under Adelaide Brooke. On 21 November 2059, the base was overrun by a sentient, water-based lifeform and the base was destroyed to prevent it reaching Earth. Originally, nobody survived; the Tenth Doctor altered time, saving Brooke and two other crew members (though Brooke would kill herself soon after). (TV: The Waters of Mars)
The Ice Warriors had not given up their ambitions to colonise Earth. A strike team was sent to take control of T-Mat, and use it to transport seed pods to Earth that were designed to terraform its environment to an environment more suited to them. The fleet was destroyed thanks to the Second Doctor. (TV: The Seeds of Death)
According to Harold, who had watched a documentary about the Ice Warriors on the History Channel, the Ice Warriors were "supposed to have been wiped out" following the T-Mat incident. In the 23rd century, the Ice Warrior expert, Professor Schooner, declared the Ice Warriors "extinct" for "centuries", while Gregson Grenville had learnt in school that "[t]hey were all melted when the invasion fleet spiralled into the Sun". According to Grenville, nobody knew of any Ice Warriors existing after this period until the attack on Deimos Moonbase in the 23rd century. Human tourists to the catacombs of Deimos in the 23rd century, such as Margaret, considered the moon the "final resting place" of the Ice Warriors and she and Harold expressed shock that "real" Ice Warriors could ever exist. One of the Ice Warriors that awoke from the tombs on Deimos considered him and eight others the last of their race. The Eighth Doctor corrected him, mentioning the tombs in the Sol system's asteroid belt containing Ice Warriors yet to have been awakened. (AUDIO: Deimos)
However, according to another account, in the 2080s, the Ice Warriors fought and lost the Thousand Day War with Earth, opening up the planet for human colonisation and exploitation. (PROSE: Transit)
The human colonisation of Mars commenced in 2095. (PROSE: Beige Planet Mars)
Colonisation period
Early colonisation
Early Mars colonists discovered the body of Bernice Summerfield, frozen in stasis following her encounter with the Epoch on Zordin. A small cult was formed which worshiped Benny as a goddess. (AUDIO: Brand Management)
22nd century
By the early 22nd century, Mars had been partially terraformed into a tourist resort for the wealthy. As the seas and canals were not red enough for the tourists, cranberry juice was poured into them. This human activity led to a malevolent, formless entity escaping from the sea's reflective surface. The Ninth Doctor and Rose defeated it; the Doctor believing the threat of it returning would force humanity to treat Mars with respect. (COMIC: The Cruel Sea) Later in the 22nd century, Mars had ceased being a pure resort and had residential settlements.
The Seventh Doctor and his companions Chris Cwej and Roz Forrester visited Mars during the period of the Dalek occupation of Earth. (PROSE: GodEngine) The Daleks invaded Mars while on their way to Earth. Colonists fought back and, with the help of the Ice Warriors, created a virus which ate away at Dalek cable insulation. The Dalek forces were driven away from the colony and decided just to focus on the Earth. (PROSE: The Dalek Invasion of Mars)
Shortly after the Dalek defeat, Anji Kapoor was stranded on Mars for four years. According to one account, at this time, Ice Warriors would sometimes stage attacks on human workplaces in an attempt to gain independence from humanity; these attacks largely failed. (PROSE: Fear Itself)
23rd century
However, the Eighth Doctor mentioned that colonies of humans existed on Mars, numbering 300,000 in the 23rd century according to Temperance Finch, although according to this account, no Ice Warriors were known to live there, and were widely considered to have become extinct until a tomb containing live Ice Warriors was found on Deimos. (AUDIO: Deimos)
According to one account, the Eighth Doctor altered the beam of the atmospheric re-ioniser on Deimos Moonbase to make Mars more Earth-like for its inhabitants, saving them from being killed by the beam. The feedback the Doctor caused from the ionisation beam set the atmosphere of the moonbase alight, setting the entire moon on fire, making it an artificial sun to heat the human colonists. (AUDIO: The Resurrection of Mars)
25th century
Around 2400, Mars had only a single, small colony and was the birthplace of Space Army Commander Vel Karneen. The Daleks invaded the solar system and Mars was their third target. Everyone in the colony was killed in three hours. Karneen had been offworld and led the Space Army against the Daleks. (COMIC: Invasion of the Daleks, PROSE: The Secret of the Mountain, Break-through!) Later, the Daleks used "Humanoids" for an ambush on Mars. (COMIC: The Humanoids)
Darzil Carlisle was born on Mars just outside Olympus Mons in 2414. (AUDIO: The Game)
The Martian Wars took place circa the 25th century. (PROSE: The Taking of Chelsea 426)
26th century
By the 26th century, the time of Bernice Summerfield, scholars like Benny herself devoted themselves to the study of Ice Warrior culture. (PROSE: Transit)
In 2545, during the Dalek War, the Daleks were able to seize control of Mars due to a failure to deploy Mars' nuclear deterrent. They would be eventually driven off-world by Earth and its allies. By 2595, humans celebrated the five hundredth anniversary of the start of human colonisation. (PROSE: Beige Planet Mars)
27th century
In the 27th century, Mars' President Lithops commissioned the development of a time machine. Time assassins attempted to use it to erase his timeline; the Tenth Doctor stopped them and destroyed the unsafe machine. (COMIC: Bus Stop!) It was around this time Bernice Summerfield came to Mars to discover a Pyramid that contained the essence of Sutekh and a possessed Seventh Doctor. She arrived during a war between the Martian colonial government and the Free Mars Party. (AUDIO: The Pyramid of Sutekh)
Cyberon War
During the Cyberon War, which lasted around a century and, depending on accounts, ended either in 2777 (PROSE: Cyber-Hunt) or 3009, (PROSE: Flight of the Cyberons) a secret space station orbiting Mars was used for discreet weapons development by the Earth Alliance. Dracula's head was meant to be transported there for study from a base in the Alpha Centauri system, but was intercepted by the Cyberons before it could be safely delivered. (AUDIO: Curse of the Cyberons)
31st century
In 3004, there was the great Mars ash dieback. (PROSE: The Secret in Vault 13)
40th century
Circa the 39th or 40th century, Mars and the Ice Warriors were part of a Galactic Federation that included Earth, Alpha Centauri and Arcturus. The presence of trisilicate made the planet politically important. (TV: The Curse of Peladon)
In the 40th century, a Dalek ship was detected in the vicinity of Mars. (AUDIO: The Destroyers)
By the 40th century, the most common form of residential home on Mars was a prefabricated model known as M9. (AUDIO: The Anachronauts)
In the late 40th century, Mars was among the "Big Four" powers in an alliance against the Dalek invasions. It was led by Bakabi when the Big Four decided to found the Space Security Service. (PROSE: The Outlaw Planet) Space Security agent Bret Vyon was born in Colony 16. (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan) In the year 4000, Mars was one of the key targets for the Dalek takeover of the solar system. (TV: Mission to the Unknown)
Mars would later see combat in the Great War. Though the Daleks managed to make planetfall on the red planet, they were defeated by a virus, possibly derived from the Movellan virus, that attacked the insulation of the cables in their electrical systems. Although the Daleks eventually discovered an antidote, they retreated from Mars. Combined with their expulsion from Venus, the Daleks were driven back from the solar system, but the war continued elsewhere in the galaxy. (PROSE: The Whoniverse)
Further on
In the 82nd century, Mars was privately owned by Josiah W. Dogbolter. (COMIC: The Moderator)
By the year 200,000, Mars was home to a university of questionable reputation, with a nurse aboard Satellite Five associating it with the "Martian boondocks". Adam Mitchell pretended to be a student at "the university of Mars", a backstory he improvised without knowing whether or not this university existed. (TV: The Long Game)
In 200,100, the planet was the subject of a question on the Game Station: it was determined, however, that the dish Gaffabeque originated on Lucifer, and not Mars. (TV: Bad Wolf)
In the far future, radio and television broadcasts concerning the first manned mission to Mars could be accessed via the Gogglebox inside the Moon. (AUDIO: The Reaping, The Gathering)
Uncertain dates
Under the influence and control of the Usurians, a colony of humans temporarily moved to Mars, then on to Pluto after overpopulation had made Earth uninhabitable. (TV: The Sun Makers)
The Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith visited a colonised Mars. (PROSE: Scarab of Death)
The Fourth Doctor again travelled to the planet with Leela and visited a terraformed, commercialised Mars abundant with commercialised imagery derived from human science fiction. (PROSE: Crimson Dawn)
The Seventh Doctor stated that Mars had been terraformed on four different occasions by four different races in a million year time frame. (PROSE: GodEngine)
The Seventh Doctor and Ace once visited Mars. (AUDIO: Gods and Monsters)
The Seventh Doctor and Sally Morgan visited Mars, where they checked hieroglyphs on the tomb of an ancient star god. (AUDIO: Gods and Monsters)
Erimem, Andy Hansen, and Helena donned spacesuits and visited Mars where they left a copy of David Bowie's Life on Mars for future scientists to discover. (PROSE: Life on Mars on Mars)
Andy Hansen and Erimem visited Mars again by themselves. A weather control station announced a blizzard by 9:00 local time. (PROSE: Auld Acquaintance)
Mars was one of the Earth Alliance's military strongholds during the Second Great Dalek Occupation. (AUDIO: The Fearless: Part 4)
Alternate timelines
In an alternate timeline, the Galactic Dutch Company had created domed colonies on Mars by 1983. (AUDIO: The Waters of Amsterdam)
In an alternate timeline, Andy and Helena returned to Mars after Erimem went missing on 31 December 2017 to see if Erimem had somehow been stranded there. (PROSE: Auld Acquaintance)
One version of Mars in the 10,000 Dawns had a human population and a democratic planet-wide government, headed at one point in its history by President Zhang Han. It had a variety of popular exports, including four different varieties of olives. (PROSE: Birthdays are Made for Memories)
Other references
The Museum of the Last Ones had specimens of extinct species from Mars. (PROSE: The Last Dodo)
Ben Jackson asked the Second Doctor to visit the planet, in vain, since the TARDIS would have landed on the Moon eventually. (TV: The Moonbase)
The Fourth Doctor claimed to have a pilot's licence for a Mars-Venus rocket run. (TV: Robot)
In an interview hosted by Mickey on his website in early 2006, Henry Van Statten claimed that felt as if he was "still a little kid who [wanted] to be an astronaut, go to Mars, and make friends with a real, live alien." (PROSE: Henry Van Statten [+]Loading...["Henry Van Statten (short story)"])
Donna Noble believed the Tenth Doctor was from Mars. He later corrected her. (TV: The Runaway Bride)
The Thirteenth Doctor claimed to have shown author Ray Bradbury what Mars was really like, which left him disappointed. (COMIC: Meet the Fam!)
Behind the scenes
- Though unpublished during his lifetime, David Whitaker's short story Rennigan's Record is the earliest portrayal of Mars in the Doctor Who universe.
- According to the "Earth-Skaro Timescale" of Terry Nation's Dalek Annual 1976, the Daleks invaded both Mars and Venus in the Skaro-year 9143, concurrent to the Earth year 1066.
- In 2009, the presence of water on Mars was a major plot point of TV: The Waters of Mars. Six years later, it was discovered Mars' surface actually had evidence of free-flowing water.
External links
- Mars at the Faction Paradox wiki
- Mars at the LEGO Dimensions Wiki
|