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Data Request: The Shale

  Designation:

  Type:

  Overview:

  1. Activation:

  The Shale are signaled by a “harbinger beacon”, emitting a [Redacted: AL-15

  2. Mobilization:

  The Shale ignite stored biofuel to propel themselves directly toward the beacon.

  3. Initial Assault:

  4. Resource Extraction:

  5. Beacon Construction:

  6. Passive Surveillance:

  Theories:

  Precautionary Measures:

  1. Harbinger Beacon Detection:[Redacted: AL-15]

  2. Planetary Defense:

  3. Evacuation:

  Should a harbinger beacon be activated, immediate evacuation of the system is recommended. Note that while typical swarm speed is at a relatively sluggish [Redacted: AL-8

  4. Containment:

  Containment is rarely necessary, as those exposed are typically consumed, and the sheer size of most swarms exerts a gravitational effect that prevents escape for most ships should they come close enough to contact. Due to the burrowing and replicating nature of the Shale, any ship suspected of contact with a swarm should be immediately annihilated to prevent further spread.

  **Case Study: Research Vessel [Designation Obscured] Incident**

  **Overview:**

  An independent research collective received authorization to study Shale behavior at safe distance from an active consumption event located at [LOCATION REDACTED]. The vessel maintained recommended distance of [SAFETY GUIDELINES: 2c]

  **Initial Phase (TUs 1-32):**

  - Swarm approach velocity variance based on planetary mass

  - Atmospheric stripping patterns

  - Individual unit replication rates

  - Beacon construction methodology

  No anomalies reported. Vessel maintained strict quarantine protocols. Remote equipment showed no contamination. **Deviation Event (TU 33):**

  One remote observation probe reported malfunction and was retrieved for repair. Standard decontamination procedures were followed. Probe was cycled through vacuum exposure, electromagnetic pulse, and chemical bath before being brought aboard.

  Post-mission analysis suggests this was the contamination vector.

  **Progression (TUs 34-41):**

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  TU 34: Minor systems malfunctions in probe bay. Attributed to EMP damage.

  TU 36: Hull sensors detect microscopic pitting near probe bay airlock. Maintenance scheduled.

  TU 38: Three crew members report equipment malfunctions. Unrelated sectors.

  TU 39: Life support efficiency decreasing. Cause unclear.

  TU 40: Hull integrity alerts in multiple sections. Emergency protocols initiated. Root cause confirmed.

  TU 42, 03:17: Last transmission received.

  **Final Transmission (Partial):**[static][interference][NAME WITHHELD][screaming][DESIGNATION: 1c][signal lost]

  **Escape Pod Event:**[DESIGNATION: 1c][DESIGNATION: 1c][NAME WITHHELD]

  **Way Station Response:**

  **Neutralization Attempt:**

  TU 0: Escape pod detected on approach vector

  TU 2.7: Contamination warning received

  TU 2.8: Station defense systems activated

  TU 2.9: Automated defense batteries engaged escape pod at 847 kilometers

  TU 3.0: Pod breached, explosion detected

  TU 3.1: Defense systems confirm pod destruction

  TU 3.2: Debris trajectory analysis: 94% of pod mass diverted from station

  TU 3.3: Station resumes normal operations

  **Critical Error:** Defense batteries fragmented pod at insufficient range. Approximately 6% of pod debris (estimated 140kg) intersected station outer hull at high velocity. Three fragments, ranging from 2-8kg, impacted station docking ring. Standard protocol required debris sterilization.

  **Station Timeline:**

  TU 0.0: Pod debris impacts docking ring (three fragments)

  TU 1.8: Docking bay maintenance reports unusual pitting on impact sites - cleanup postponed

  TU 3.2: Hull sensors detect microscopic structural degradation around impacts

  TU 4.5: Engineering reports power fluctuations in docking ring

  TU 6.0: Structural alerts in multiple adjacent sections

  TU 6.8: Station administrator recognizes contamination pattern

  TU 7.0: Emergency station-wide alert - Active Shale replication confirmed

  TU 7.2: Station council convened

  TU 7.5: Engineering assessment: Contamination spreading exponentially through docking ring

  TU 7.6: Recommendation presented: Jettison contaminated sections before spread reaches core station

  TU 7.7: Council vote: 6 in favor, 3 opposed, 2 abstaining

  TU 7.8: Jettison order issued - Docking Ring Sections 3, 4, and 5 to be separated

  TU 8.3: Engineering reports contamination detected in Section 6 - spreading faster than predicted

  TU 8.4: Revised jettison order - Sections 3-7 must be separated immediately

  TU 8.5: Station administrator orders immediate jettison despite incomplete evacuation

  TU 8.7: Explosive bolts fired - Sections 3-7 separate from core station

  TU 8.8: Separated sections confirmed to contain 620 trapped personnel

  TU 9.0: Core station confirms containment - no contamination detected in remaining structure

  TU 9.2: Separated sections structurally failing - hull breaches visible

  TU 9.5: Full external sweep performed

  TU 11: Alert rescinded

  **Casualties:**

  Research Vessel: 43

  Escape pod: 1

  Way Station: 645

  **Total: 689**

  **Lessons Learned:**

  1. Protocol compliance is necessary but not sufficient

  2. “Negligible threat” does not exist with Shale exposure

  3. Cleanup cannot be postponed for ANY reason

  4. Distance of neutralization is critical

  5. Implosives should be leveraged to verify clear space

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