1 00:00:03,360 --> 00:00:08,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Stuff to Blow Your Mind, a production of iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:10,880 --> 00:00:12,920 Speaker 2: Hi, my name is Robert Lamb And this is the 3 00:00:12,960 --> 00:00:15,640 Speaker 2: Monster Fact, a short form series from Stuff to Blow 4 00:00:15,640 --> 00:00:19,919 Speaker 2: Your Mind, focusing on mythical creatures, ideas, and monsters in 5 00:00:20,000 --> 00:00:27,000 Speaker 2: time our journey through the alien universe. This time brings 6 00:00:27,080 --> 00:00:30,600 Speaker 2: us to the mysterious planet for the rotting paradise of 7 00:00:30,720 --> 00:00:34,280 Speaker 2: Alien Covenant. Once an occupied world of the Engineers, the 8 00:00:34,280 --> 00:00:37,000 Speaker 2: planet suffered a mass extinction event at the hands of 9 00:00:37,040 --> 00:00:40,600 Speaker 2: the rogue android David. Descending from the sky in a 10 00:00:40,640 --> 00:00:45,440 Speaker 2: stolen Engineer starship, he unleashed a devastating bombardment of the 11 00:00:45,440 --> 00:00:51,120 Speaker 2: skeetide ampules eradicating most non botanical non fungal life with 12 00:00:51,200 --> 00:00:55,600 Speaker 2: the dreaded evolutionary accelerant agent A zero slash thirty nine 13 00:00:55,560 --> 00:00:59,080 Speaker 2: to fifty nine x dot ninety one slash fifteen. But 14 00:00:59,160 --> 00:01:02,840 Speaker 2: as we've explored already, the black Goo doesn't destroy everything 15 00:01:02,880 --> 00:01:07,520 Speaker 2: in such incidents. No, it also creates new dangerous organisms 16 00:01:07,560 --> 00:01:11,279 Speaker 2: to prowl the lifeless borders of devastation, and it tends 17 00:01:11,319 --> 00:01:14,039 Speaker 2: to find its way back to the basic form of 18 00:01:14,080 --> 00:01:17,560 Speaker 2: a xenomorphic predator, in this case, working its way up 19 00:01:17,600 --> 00:01:21,840 Speaker 2: from fungal and possibly insect life. The neomorph begins as 20 00:01:21,880 --> 00:01:25,600 Speaker 2: a fungal growth that produces small pods or egg sacs, 21 00:01:25,880 --> 00:01:29,920 Speaker 2: which release a swarm of moats upon disturbance. These moats 22 00:01:29,959 --> 00:01:32,040 Speaker 2: are able to move through the air by their own volition, 23 00:01:32,600 --> 00:01:36,640 Speaker 2: sometimes synchronizing in murmerations to zero in on a potential 24 00:01:36,680 --> 00:01:41,560 Speaker 2: host organism's vulnerable orifices. The moats are often compared to 25 00:01:41,600 --> 00:01:44,560 Speaker 2: plant pollen, though of course pollen depends on vectors such 26 00:01:44,600 --> 00:01:47,559 Speaker 2: as wind or other organisms to move from one plant 27 00:01:47,560 --> 00:01:50,560 Speaker 2: to the next. We might instead be tempted to compare 28 00:01:50,600 --> 00:01:54,920 Speaker 2: these moats to fairy flies or fairy wasps, the smallest 29 00:01:54,960 --> 00:01:58,680 Speaker 2: known flying organisms. As pointed out by Julius Klarr in 30 00:01:58,720 --> 00:02:01,960 Speaker 2: a twenty twenty four article for The Sierra Club, fairy 31 00:02:02,000 --> 00:02:05,240 Speaker 2: wasp body length can measure as little as zero point 32 00:02:05,400 --> 00:02:08,880 Speaker 2: one three nine millimeters, equal to the thickness of a 33 00:02:08,960 --> 00:02:11,680 Speaker 2: human hair, so it's not out of the question for 34 00:02:11,760 --> 00:02:15,919 Speaker 2: something so small to be capable of powered and deliberate flight. 35 00:02:16,680 --> 00:02:21,080 Speaker 2: According to Freeley Publishing's Alien RPG source books, the neomorph 36 00:02:21,200 --> 00:02:24,000 Speaker 2: moats make their way into a host's body, where they 37 00:02:24,040 --> 00:02:27,440 Speaker 2: deliver microscopic amounts of the black goo to the host's 38 00:02:27,440 --> 00:02:31,160 Speaker 2: blood stream, and then the moats die. In the blood, 39 00:02:31,320 --> 00:02:35,799 Speaker 2: the evolutionary accelerant mutates white blood cells, forming a tumor 40 00:02:35,960 --> 00:02:38,840 Speaker 2: like mass that rapidly develops into an embryo, referred to 41 00:02:38,880 --> 00:02:42,680 Speaker 2: as a blood burster. When this small quadruped is ready 42 00:02:42,720 --> 00:02:45,840 Speaker 2: to emerge from the host, it bursts out through whatever 43 00:02:45,880 --> 00:02:49,400 Speaker 2: part of the anatomy is most accessible the mouth, the back, 44 00:02:49,720 --> 00:02:53,040 Speaker 2: even an eye socket. It depends in large part on 45 00:02:53,200 --> 00:02:57,800 Speaker 2: where the tumor develops. If it survives, the bloodbuster rapidly 46 00:02:57,840 --> 00:03:04,040 Speaker 2: develops into a neomorph. These medium size pales xenomorphic predators 47 00:03:04,040 --> 00:03:08,680 Speaker 2: boast goblin shark like protrusible jaws, much like the deacon 48 00:03:08,760 --> 00:03:12,200 Speaker 2: that we previously discuss, along with a whipping spike tail 49 00:03:12,440 --> 00:03:16,960 Speaker 2: in a cluster of dorsal spikes, which, as a blood burster, 50 00:03:17,320 --> 00:03:20,520 Speaker 2: aids in its emergence. Let's talk a bit more about 51 00:03:20,520 --> 00:03:25,640 Speaker 2: those goblin shark jaws. Though the deep sea Mitsukarina ostoni 52 00:03:26,000 --> 00:03:30,080 Speaker 2: isn't alone in having protrusible jaws. Shark jaws are not 53 00:03:30,200 --> 00:03:34,560 Speaker 2: attached to the organism's cartilage skull and move as separate parts, 54 00:03:34,800 --> 00:03:39,560 Speaker 2: allowing for varying degrees of protrusion when attacking prey. The 55 00:03:39,600 --> 00:03:43,560 Speaker 2: goblin shark merely boasts the most extreme jaw protrusion known, 56 00:03:43,840 --> 00:03:47,120 Speaker 2: both in terms of reach and speed. According to a 57 00:03:47,160 --> 00:03:51,560 Speaker 2: twenty sixteen article by Nakaya at All published in Scientific Reports, 58 00:03:51,880 --> 00:03:55,720 Speaker 2: the jaw sling shots forward at a maximum velocity of 59 00:03:55,760 --> 00:03:58,760 Speaker 2: three point one meters per second to eight point six 60 00:03:58,800 --> 00:04:01,920 Speaker 2: to nine point four pcent of the total length of 61 00:04:02,000 --> 00:04:06,080 Speaker 2: the shark. They cited the phylogenetic evidence that suggests the 62 00:04:06,120 --> 00:04:09,720 Speaker 2: adaptation evolved in response to their food poor deep sea 63 00:04:09,840 --> 00:04:13,120 Speaker 2: environment and is a possible trade off for the loss 64 00:04:13,120 --> 00:04:16,120 Speaker 2: of strong swimming ability. It might not be able to 65 00:04:16,240 --> 00:04:19,320 Speaker 2: catch desired prey in an all out pursuit, but if 66 00:04:19,320 --> 00:04:22,560 Speaker 2: they get close enough, their jaw length can make up 67 00:04:22,600 --> 00:04:25,960 Speaker 2: the difference. As seen in alien covenant, neomorphs can act 68 00:04:26,040 --> 00:04:29,920 Speaker 2: as both pack hunters and solitary stalkers. While they may 69 00:04:30,120 --> 00:04:34,360 Speaker 2: enter prolonged states of hibernation, they're ultimately short lived and 70 00:04:34,640 --> 00:04:38,040 Speaker 2: don't seem to engage in any form of host procurement 71 00:04:38,160 --> 00:04:42,480 Speaker 2: or parasitic reproduction while alive. When they die or are killed, 72 00:04:42,760 --> 00:04:46,760 Speaker 2: their corpses simply produce more sporesas ready to release more 73 00:04:46,800 --> 00:04:50,440 Speaker 2: black moats when a potential host ventures near. Now, in 74 00:04:50,480 --> 00:04:53,840 Speaker 2: the natural world, we certainly have organisms that die after reproduction, 75 00:04:54,200 --> 00:04:58,080 Speaker 2: what we call simularity. These organisms reproduce but a single 76 00:04:58,120 --> 00:05:01,919 Speaker 2: time and then die. Pacific salmon are a great example 77 00:05:01,960 --> 00:05:06,080 Speaker 2: of this, along with certain insects and molluscs. The neomorph, however, 78 00:05:06,400 --> 00:05:09,320 Speaker 2: would seem to reproduce through death, which is of course 79 00:05:09,360 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 2: a fitting xenomorphic and gigresqu twist on everything it kills, 80 00:05:14,520 --> 00:05:18,160 Speaker 2: it dies, and through its death it ideally spreads more 81 00:05:18,240 --> 00:05:21,200 Speaker 2: of those motes that will produce new blood bursters and 82 00:05:21,240 --> 00:05:24,880 Speaker 2: new neomorphs, presumably until all life on a world is 83 00:05:24,920 --> 00:05:28,680 Speaker 2: reduced to just a few hibernating xenos and their weighting 84 00:05:28,760 --> 00:05:32,960 Speaker 2: fungal eggsacts, we might reasonably compare it to various pathogens 85 00:05:33,120 --> 00:05:40,080 Speaker 2: that spread via contact with dead hosts. That is the neomorph. 86 00:05:40,120 --> 00:05:43,200 Speaker 2: But hey, tune in for additional episodes of the Monster 87 00:05:43,320 --> 00:05:46,920 Speaker 2: Fact each week. Our Alien series will continue next week 88 00:05:47,120 --> 00:05:50,480 Speaker 2: with the classic xenomorph eggs, so we are going to 89 00:05:50,520 --> 00:05:55,600 Speaker 2: get into the classic xenomorph life cycle and biology. So 90 00:05:55,920 --> 00:05:58,000 Speaker 2: write in if you have thoughts on anything we've covered 91 00:05:58,040 --> 00:06:01,200 Speaker 2: thus far, and as always, you can email us at contact, 92 00:06:01,360 --> 00:06:13,080 Speaker 2: it's Stuff to Blow Your Mind dot com. 93 00:06:13,160 --> 00:06:15,720 Speaker 1: Stuff to Blow Your Mind is a production of iHeartRadio. 94 00:06:16,040 --> 00:06:20,040 Speaker 1: For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, 95 00:06:20,120 --> 00:06:21,920 Speaker 1: or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.