spinner
x
This website is using cookies, in order to track this cookie warning and other popups, for managing login sessions, and for website analytics. We do not collect or store personally identifiable information, nor track or display advertising related information. That's Fine
 - Galactic Exploration Catalog - 
Revision for Research Vessel Cete

Previous Revision, by PhoenixBlue [2025-01-07 15:04:23]Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2025-01-07 15:38:26]
DISCOVERER
NAME
Research Vessel CeteResearch Vessel Cete
SYSTEMNAME
Col 173 Sector LJ-F c12-0Col 173 Sector LJ-F c12-0
CATEGORY
HistoricalHistorical
CATEGORY 2
Mystery and XenologyMystery and Xenology
REGION
Inner Orion SpurInner Orion Spur
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
CALLSIGN
SUMMARY
The Research Vessel Cete is an abandoned research vessel first discovered in June 3303 following records that surfaced to GalNet in February.The Research Vessel Cete is an abandoned research vessel first discovered in June 3303 following records that surfaced to GalNet in February.
DESCRIPTION

The Research Vessel Cete was discovered in June 3303 following reports on GalNet of "curious records" published in February of that year. The ship was chartered by xenobiology expert Professor Melville to find artefacts from the Guardian civilisation. Melville claimed to have information that would help the crew find more sites.

Crew logs indicated the Cete found three sites in three systems: Synuefe LY-I b42-2, Synuefe NL-N c23-4, and Synuefe TP-F b44-0. Melville discovered three types of site, later classified Alpha, Beta and Gamma, and supposed each site type provided different functionality. However, Melville soon lost his tenuous grasp on sanity, locking down the ship's communications and, later, welding shut the airlock between the laboratories and the drive ship. Some time later, the ship's atmospheric processors failed, leading the crew to die from hypoxia.

The system in which the Cete was discovered lies several hundred light-years further from the Core Systems than "Site 1," in Synuefe XR-H d11-102, leading some aboard the ill-fated ship's crew to speculate that he was looking for additional sites outside the Synuefe sector. Explorers would later find Guardian sites as far away as the Eta Carina Nebula and NGC 3199 nebula.

The derelict Research Vessel Cete was discovered in June 3303 following reports on GalNet of "curious records" published in February of that year. The ship was chartered by xenobiology expert Professor Melville to find artefacts from the Guardian civilisation. Melville claimed to have information that would help the crew find more sites.

Crew logs indicated the Cete found three sites in three systems: Synuefe LY-I b42-2, Synuefe NL-N c23-4, and Synuefe TP-F b44-0. Melville discovered three types of sites, later classified Alpha, Beta and Gamma, and posited that each site type provided different functionalities. However, the professor soon lost his tenuous grasp on sanity, locking down the ship's communications and, later, welding shut the airlock between the laboratories and the drive ship. Some time later, the ship's atmospheric processors failed, leading the crew to die from hypoxia.

The system in which the Cete was discovered lies several hundred light-years farther from inhabited space than "Site 1" in Synuefe XR-H d11-102, leading some aboard the ill-fated ship's crew to speculate that he was looking for additional sites in this region of space, and that he wasn't planning to return. Had the Cete kept going, they would have found the numerous Guardian ruins they were looking for.

JOURNAL
OBSERVATORY
All content is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY‑NC‑SA 3.0)

This website is not an official tool for the game Elite: Dangerous and is not affiliated with Frontier Developments. All information provided is based on publicly available information and data supplied by players, and may not be entirely accurate. 'Elite', the Elite logo, the Elite: Dangerous logo, 'Frontier' and the Frontier logo are registered trademarks of Frontier Developments plc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks and copyrights are acknowledged as the property of their respective owners.

Special thanks go to all commanders and explorers who graciously upload their data to EDDN, EDSM, and EDAstro to make all of this possible. We wouldn't exist without your data contributions. For any bug reports or feature suggestions, please visit our forum thread.