suppose so,” Trigger said hesitantly. She paused, frowning. “But do we really have any right, legal or otherwise, to interfere with them if that’s their decision? It’s not an off-limits world. Why shouldn’t they just be considered the first settlers there? After all, the trees would give human beings everything they need to live as well as they could live anywhere else.”
“So they would,” said the Commissioner. “Well, there’s the second part of the report I had. The paleontological team hadn’t been looking for anything of the sort, of course, but they’ve come across a couple of ruins and begun to uncover them.”
“Ruins?” said Mantelish, surprised.
“Yes,” the Commissioner said. “Those three wouldn’t be the first human settlers on that world, Trigger. The ruins are about eight hundred years old, and there’s enough to show quite definitely that they were once occupied by human beings.”
Trigger looked startled. “Human beings—where would they have come from?”
“Presumably it was one of the groups that were pushing out from the Old Territory during the period the Hub was being settled. Interstellar drives and transmitters weren’t too efficient at the time. I got in contact with the Charting Bureau and had them run a check on an area around the trees’ world representing a current week’s cruising range. An early colonial group which wanted to settle a number of worlds without losing contact among themselves shouldn’t have scattered farther than that. The Bureau ran the check and called me back. They had the information I wanted. Charting records show that two other terratype planets within the area I inquired about are also covered with a blanket of apparently homogenous forest vegetation.”
Trigger asked, “You mean those early colonists transplanted the trees to those two other worlds?”
“Evidently they did.”
Mantelish nodded. “A reasonable supposition. If no restrictions were placed on it, the tree should cover the land areas of a terratype world
“So they would,” said the Commissioner. “Well, there’s the second part of the report I had. The paleontological team hadn’t been looking for anything of the sort, of course, but they’ve come across a couple of ruins and begun to uncover them.”
“Ruins?” said Mantelish, surprised.
“Yes,” the Commissioner said. “Those three wouldn’t be the first human settlers on that world, Trigger. The ruins are about eight hundred years old, and there’s enough to show quite definitely that they were once occupied by human beings.”
Trigger looked startled. “Human beings—where would they have come from?”
“Presumably it was one of the groups that were pushing out from the Old Territory during the period the Hub was being settled. Interstellar drives and transmitters weren’t too efficient at the time. I got in contact with the Charting Bureau and had them run a check on an area around the trees’ world representing a current week’s cruising range. An early colonial group which wanted to settle a number of worlds without losing contact among themselves shouldn’t have scattered farther than that. The Bureau ran the check and called me back. They had the information I wanted. Charting records show that two other terratype planets within the area I inquired about are also covered with a blanket of apparently homogenous forest vegetation.”
Trigger asked, “You mean those early colonists transplanted the trees to those two other worlds?”
“Evidently they did.”
Mantelish nodded. “A reasonable supposition. If no restrictions were placed on it, the tree should cover the land areas of a terratype world