Cosima Niehaus (
youwonscience) wrote in
therookery2018-02-17 03:11 pm
Entry tags:
Private: A Report
FORM: Sending crystal
SENDER: Cosima
RECIPIENT: Locked to Thranduil, Christine and Inessa
WHAT: Cosima has found something
WHEN: A bit after Cosima is cured.
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: No warnings for now. If we need to make this a bit time-fluid because of Inessa and Christine being affected by phylactery shenangians, no worries.
SENDER: Cosima
RECIPIENT: Locked to Thranduil, Christine and Inessa
WHAT: Cosima has found something
WHEN: A bit after Cosima is cured.
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: No warnings for now. If we need to make this a bit time-fluid because of Inessa and Christine being affected by phylactery shenangians, no worries.
Hey, bosses, it's Cosima. So when I was working on helping to look for a cure to the blood plauge, I was looking at a lot of lyrium under my microscope, both mixed in blood and on its own. I didn't help cure the sickness, really, but I noticed that the lyriophages -- uh, the things causing lyrium to break down into that more liquid stage you may have seen it turn into -- interacted with the lyrium itself in ways I wouldn't have expected with a mineral. Since I've been well, I've been doing a few more experiments, and now I'm pretty sure.
...guys, I think lyrium's alive.
I mean, "life" is a complicated proposition, people in my world argue about the exact definition, but for our purposes, I'm gonna stand by that assessment. I'm writing up a detailed report and I'll get a copy to each of you, but since I have to copy it out longhand I wanted to tell you now so I wasn't just sitting on this.
I'll answer any questions I can, and I'm leaving it up to you guys who to tell and when.

{ private to all four of them }
[ She's thinking of lichen or something that grows on cave walls. Lyrium is mined, but if it's not a mineral, then she has to try and put this in terms she understands. ]
These lyriophages: they interact with lyrium the same way it does with other living things?
Jumping in, though if we eventually want an order, also fine
After all, organisms do sometimes consume inorganic material - we eat salt - but we were already looking into a pathogenic relationship. Lots of diseases in my world come from microorganisms attacking healthy living tissue.
I don't think lyrium fits neatly into plant or animal as I understand them. But it seems to react to stimuli in a way I wouldn't expect a crystal to do.
same here; just jump in whenever
[ A pause. ]
Looking through your microscope, are there ways to test the lyrium to see how it reacts to other stimuli?
no subject
no subject
no subject
I'll get you all the notes of what I've done so far, but I think the more comparisons we can do, the more we'll learn. I'm actually... if I'm right, this is way closer to what I did at home than studying a mineral was, I've got more ideas of some ways forward. I don't want to jump to conclusions hastily, but it's a really promising idea.
no subject
no subject
[ A pause. ]
I know we are all busy women, but I would like to schedule this as soon as possible. We could make a great breakthrough if we can find out what makes this lyrium red, and so much more dangerous.
no subject
[In case anything happens to her, though she doesn't say that aloud. The blood plague was a close call.]
If you guys want to stop by my workspace in the meantime, I can show you what I've been looking at with the regular lyrium, to give you a baseline idea to compare from. And I think it might be worth comparing samples from different places. Inessa, do I remember right that we've got some pre-explosion lyrium from the Temple of Sacred Ashes you wanted us to look at?
no subject
no subject
no subject
I'm considering this priority one for now on my end, so just let me know when you want to meet and I'm there.