Sarah backs the Doctor's time theory
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Sarah supports the Doctor's theory with their recent encounter with a peasant from the age of King John, which General Finch dismisses.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Professional resolve masking irritation at Finch's dismissive attitude
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart mediates between the Doctor and General Finch, explaining the crisis and attempting to steer conversation toward scientific inquiry while acknowledging Finch's authority.
- • To ensure the crisis is addressed through both military and scientific means
- • To prevent Finch from escalating the situation into unnecessary violence
- • Scientific investigation is essential to solving the crisis
- • Military action alone will not address the root cause
Impatient and contemptuous of what he perceives as academic distraction
General Finch dismisses the Doctor's and Sarah's claims as scientific nonsense, preferring to attribute the dinosaur appearances to a secret conspiracy of breeding and demanding immediate military action.
- • To assert military control over the crisis and eliminate perceived threats
- • To discredit scientific explanations that conflict with his worldview
- • Military solutions are always superior to theoretical explanations
- • Doubt in science is proof of its unreliability
Frustrated by Finch's intransigence but energized by Sarah's support
The Doctor develops and promotes his temporal displacement theory, engaging Finch's skepticism head-on and urging scientific study over immediate military action.
- • To convince Finch that temporal displacement is the underlying cause of the crisis
- • To prevent unnecessary violence against creatures that may disappear naturally
- • All phenomena have logical explanations rooted in science
- • Military overreaction will exacerbate the crisis rather than solve it
Cautiously supportive of the Doctor while trying not to provoke Finch
Captain Yates diplomatically interrupts the heated exchange between Finch and the Doctor to suggest Finch reconsider the Doctor's expertise, balancing institutional respect with pragmatic support for scientific inquiry.
- • To mediate between Finch's authoritarian stance and the Doctor's scientific approach
- • To maintain operational coherence despite conflicting methods
- • The Doctor's past contributions justify hearing him out
- • Protocol should inform, not override, sound judgment in crisis
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The strategic map of England, marked with red circles indicating potential TARDIS materialization points, becomes a battleground for competing theories—Finch's conventional explanation versus the Doctor's temporal displacement model.
The Brigadier's mug of tea remains on the table throughout the heated exchange, serving as a reminder of ordinary ritual and institutional routine even as the crisis spirals and the Doctor's stirring contrasts with the gravity of the discussion.
General Finch orders the deployment of field guns outside the temporary command post, signaling his immediate preference for military force over scientific investigation—an act that escalates tensions and contradicts the Brigadier's approach.
The bag of sugar is visible on the table between the Brigadier and the Doctor, grounding the scene in an absurd yet humanizing contrast to the crisis while the Doctor absentmindedly adds spoonfuls to his tea during the tense briefing.
The temporal crisis tracking pins, including pink-tipped pins for pterodactyl sightings, are scrutinized by the Brigadier and used to substantiate claims about the extinction and reappearance of creatures in central London.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Central London's evacuated zone provides the backdrop for the dispute, representing both the immediate threat and the object of the military's misguided interventions, while its unseen prehistoric and displaced medieval elements underscore the urgency of understanding temporal anomalies.
The temporary crisis command center set up in Denham Manor transforms from an orderly Edwardian space into a claustrophobic warren of plywood partitions, churning radios, and maps holed by bullet holes, where institutional inertia clashes with existential threat.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT operates the temporary crisis command center at Denham Manor, coordinating scientific analysis with military logistics while its officers, including the Brigadier and Captain Yates, try to reconcile General Finch's aggressive tactics with the Doctor's temporal theories during a cataclysmic event.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Brigadier’s briefing on the dinosaur crisis escalates directly into General Finch’s militarized response and evacuation orders, highlighting the growing conflict between scientific inquiry and authoritarian control."
Brigadier reveals dinosaur invasion crisis"The Brigadier’s briefing on the dinosaur crisis escalates directly into General Finch’s militarized response and evacuation orders, highlighting the growing conflict between scientific inquiry and authoritarian control."
General Finch contradicts Doctor over alien response"The arrival of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart immediately follows the Doctor and Sarah hiding from soldiers, marking the transition from escape to coordinated response and UNIT involvement."
Peasant attacks fleeing stranger then vanishes"The arrival of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart immediately follows the Doctor and Sarah hiding from soldiers, marking the transition from escape to coordinated response and UNIT involvement."
T-Rex chase ends in workshop refuge"The arrival of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart immediately follows the Doctor and Sarah hiding from soldiers, marking the transition from escape to coordinated response and UNIT involvement."
Doctor confronts Brigadier in hiding"The arrival of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart immediately follows the Doctor and Sarah hiding from soldiers, marking the transition from escape to coordinated response and UNIT involvement."
Soldiers close in on hidden workshop"The arrival of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart immediately follows the Doctor and Sarah hiding from soldiers, marking the transition from escape to coordinated response and UNIT involvement."
Doctor confirms temporal anomalies"Sarah’s support for the Doctor’s theory by citing the medieval peasant directly strengthens her role as his advocate and builds credence with even skeptical authorities like the Brigadier."
Military skepticism halts dinosaur investigation"Sarah’s support for the Doctor’s theory by citing the medieval peasant directly strengthens her role as his advocate and builds credence with even skeptical authorities like the Brigadier."
Sarah shifts focus to a human instigator"The Brigadier’s briefing on the dinosaur crisis escalates directly into General Finch’s militarized response and evacuation orders, highlighting the growing conflict between scientific inquiry and authoritarian control."
Brigadier reveals dinosaur invasion crisis"The Brigadier’s briefing on the dinosaur crisis escalates directly into General Finch’s militarized response and evacuation orders, highlighting the growing conflict between scientific inquiry and authoritarian control."
General Finch contradicts Doctor over alien response"General Finch’s dismissive rejection of the Doctor’s temporal theory in favor of a 'mad scientist' explanation creates a thematic parallel across Act 1, as his resistance to unconventional science becomes a recurring obstacle."
Military skepticism halts dinosaur investigation"General Finch’s dismissive rejection of the Doctor’s temporal theory in favor of a 'mad scientist' explanation creates a thematic parallel across Act 1, as his resistance to unconventional science becomes a recurring obstacle."
Sarah shifts focus to a human instigatorKey Dialogue
"SARAH: We have just met a man from the past. A peasant from the age of King John. No, honestly, General, it's true."
"SARAH: We need to study this creature, not shoot at it. How much do you think we'll learn from a dead dinosaur?"