Arrival in a brutal new world
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor, Romana, and Duggan arrive on land in the distant past, 400 million years ago. Duggan questions their surroundings, leading to a discussion about their location.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Unshakably confident, masking underlying urgency beneath measured calm
The Doctor strides purposefully onto the barren plain, immediately identifying the temporal coordinates and geological setting with confidence. He withdraws his portable telescope to scrutinize the distant skeletal remains of the Jagaroth ship, using its lenses to anchor the group’s precarious position in both space and time.
- • secure the group’s physical and temporal foothold
- • establish the historical location to contextualize their mission
- • Cosmic events can be mapped and controlled through rational analysis
- • The universe self-corrects by eliminating destructive species
Confused disbelief masking underlying tension
Duggan emerges onto the desolate plain with pragmatic confusion, immediately challenging the Doctor’s assertions about their impossible location. His blunt disbelief reflects the human need for tangible grounding amid cosmic absurdity, grounding the scene in relatable skepticism.
- • understand their immediate surroundings
- • validate the Doctor’s claims or expose their flaws
- • Reality must correspond to physical evidence
- • Personal intuition trumps alien explanations
Skeptically pragmatic, tolerating the Doctor’s eccentricities with dry amusement
Romana steps onto the inhospitable plain with skepticism etched across her expression, immediately questioning the Doctor’s geographical assertions. Her dry retort about his geological competence precedes a pointed observation about the Jagaroth’s motives—revealing her strategic mindset and readiness to pivot toward the mission’s deeper implications.
- • verify the group’s temporal location
- • assess environmental threats and strategic implications
- • Facts demand verification regardless of authoritative claims
- • History’s predators deserve scrutiny rather than dismissal
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Doctor’s portable telescope becomes a crucial tool for mapping and confirming their location, allowing him to visually pinpoint the distant skeletal remains of the Jagaroth ship. Its brass body gleams dully as he adjusts the lenses, transforming the alien landscape into quantifiable data and reinforcing his authority over temporal geography.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Devonian wasteland transforms from mere backdrop into a hostile stage for the group’s arrival, its barrenness mirroring the temporal mission’s stakes. The blood-red sky presses down oppressively while winds scour the cracked earth underfoot, emphasizing isolation and geological antiquity alongside the skeletal Jagaroth ship on the horizon.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Jagaroth manifest through the skeletal presence of their last ship, standing as mute testimony to the Doctor’s condemnation of their race. Though physically absent, their war-like legacy looms over the trio; the ship serves as a navigational landmark and moral beacon reminding of the temporal crime soon to unfold beneath the Devonian sky.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor, Romana, and Duggan arriving in 400 million years BC logically leads to their observation of the Jagaroth spaceship and the Doctor's revelation about the paradoxical origins of life, creating a direct narrative progression in the past setting."
Doctor beholds the Jagaroth derelict"The Doctor explaining the significance of the spaceship's explosion being a fixed point that paradoxically created life on Earth (creation from destruction) reflects the reverse of Scaroth's aim to create by preventing destruction; both themes revolve around transformation and paradox."
Scaroth unveils his plan before fleeing through time"The Doctor explaining the significance of the spaceship's explosion being a fixed point that paradoxically created life on Earth (creation from destruction) reflects the reverse of Scaroth's aim to create by preventing destruction; both themes revolve around transformation and paradox."
Scaroth vanishes into the temporal void"The Doctor explaining the significance of the spaceship's explosion being a fixed point that paradoxically created life on Earth (creation from destruction) reflects the reverse of Scaroth's aim to create by preventing destruction; both themes revolve around transformation and paradox."
Team faces time displacement revelation"The Doctor, Romana, and Duggan arriving in 400 million years BC logically leads to their observation of the Jagaroth spaceship and the Doctor's revelation about the paradoxical origins of life, creating a direct narrative progression in the past setting."
Doctor beholds the Jagaroth derelict"The Doctor's presence at the spaceship in the distant past, observing the origin of human life, parallels his refusal to let Scaroth alter that origin in the present — both moments underscore the Doctor's role as guardian of historical integrity and paradoxical creation."
Scaroth unveils his plan before fleeing through time"The Doctor's presence at the spaceship in the distant past, observing the origin of human life, parallels his refusal to let Scaroth alter that origin in the present — both moments underscore the Doctor's role as guardian of historical integrity and paradoxical creation."
Scaroth vanishes into the temporal void"The Doctor's presence at the spaceship in the distant past, observing the origin of human life, parallels his refusal to let Scaroth alter that origin in the present — both moments underscore the Doctor's role as guardian of historical integrity and paradoxical creation."
Team faces time displacement revelation"The Doctor calling the Jagaroth 'vicious, callous, war-like' in the distant past mirrors Duggan's later existential questioning of human origins and his place in the universe, both exploring humanity's relationship to its violent and beautiful past — a parallel of evaluation and reflection."
Duggan confronts art value crisis"The Doctor calling the Jagaroth 'vicious, callous, war-like' in the distant past mirrors Duggan's later existential questioning of human origins and his place in the universe, both exploring humanity's relationship to its violent and beautiful past — a parallel of evaluation and reflection."
Doctor evades Duggan's origin query"The Doctor calling the Jagaroth 'vicious, callous, war-like' in the distant past mirrors Duggan's later existential questioning of human origins and his place in the universe, both exploring humanity's relationship to its violent and beautiful past — a parallel of evaluation and reflection."
Doctor Romana depart as Duggan lingers