1:[3,#B],19:[3,#B]@1T-9 energy converter@2Sophisticated power device stolen by the Ferengi from an unmanned Federation monitor post on planet Gamma Tauri IV. (“The Last Outpost” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],9:[1,#I]@1T-cell stimulator@2Medical device in use aboard the Enterprise -D. The device increases the production of T cells, a type of lymphocyte which enables humanoid bodies to fight infection. (“Identity Crisis” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],9:[1,#B],13:[1,#B],29:[1,#I]@1T-negative@2Rare Vulcan blood type possessed by Ambassador Sarek and his son Spock. Commander Spock offered himself as the blood donor for his father's heart surgery aboard the Enterprise in 2267 because he possessed the same type as the ambassador. (“Journey to Babel” [TOS])
~1:[4,#B],24:[1,#I],38:[2,#B]@1T-tauri type star system@2System with a young star whose diameter oscillates as that star settles into a stable size. In 2367, the Enterprise -D encountered a T-tauri star system with a single class-M planet in the Ngame Nebula. (“Clues” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[2,#B],20:[3,#B]@1Taar, DaiMon@2(Mike Gomez). Commander of the Ferengi Marauder spacecraft responsible for stealing a Federation T-9 energy converter from Gamma Tauri IV. (“The Last Outpost” [TNG]).
~1: [3, #b], 7: [3, #b], 58: [1, #b], 63: [3, #b]@1tachyon detection grid@2Technique devised by Geordi La Forge using a network of active tachyon beams to detect cloaked Romulan ships passing through the net. The grid required about 20 starships in order to be tactically effective, and was successfully used in 2368 to detect a convoy of Romulan ships on a covert mission to supply the Duras family forces in the Klingon civil war. (“Redemption, Part II” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#BI],5:[1,#I],12:[2,#B],15:[1,#B],18:[2,#B],28:[1,#I],32:[1,#B],34:[1,#BI]@1T'Acog, I.K.C.@2Klingon cruiser, K't'inga class, sent to return the criminals Korris, Konmel, and Kunivas to the Klingon Homeworld in 2364. The offenders managed to destroy the T'Acog and commandeered the Talarian freighter Batris. (“Heart of Glory” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[3,#B]@1Tagas@2A mythical land ruled by Elamos the Magnificent. (“Hero Worship” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],9:[1,#I],10:[1,#BI],12:[1,#I],17:[3,#B],25:[1,#I],32:[1,#I]@1Taggert, Captain@2(J. Patrick McNamara). Commander of the Starship Repulse. Former Enterprise -D chief medical officer Dr. Katherine Pulaski served under Taggert aboard the Repulse prior to her assignment to the Enterprise -D. Taggert spoke highly of Pulaski, and once noted he would have given her a shuttlecraft if it would have kept her aboard his ship. (“Unnatural Selection” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],13:[1,#I],26:[6,#B]@1Tagra IV@2Ecologically devastated planet in the Argolis Cluster. In 2369 the Enterprise -D traveled to Tagra IV to deliver much-needed supplies. (“True-Q” [TNG]). SEE: baristatic filter; Amanda Rogers; Orn Lote.
~1:[1,#B],6:[2,#B]@1Tagrans@2Inhabitants of the planet Tagra IV. (“True-Q” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[1,#B]@1Taguan@2Archaeological period classifications on planet Marlonia. Picard mentioned that the pottery from planet Marlonia was very similar to early Taguan designs but was probably closer to the Buranian period instead. (“Rascals” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],61:[2,#B],67:[3,#B]@1Tagus III@2A small planet, home to a glorious civilization some two billion years ago. Although the Taguans have long since disappeared, the planet has been the subject of 22,000 years of archaeological study. By 2367, despite 947 known excavations of the Taguan ruins, the civilization remained largely a mystery. The ruins of Tagus III were the subject of Captain Jean-Luc Picard's keynote address to the Federation Archaeological Council's annual symposium in 2367. (“QPid” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],33:[2,#B]@1Tahiti Syndrome@2Twentieth-century term for a human longing for a peaceful, idyllic natural setting when suffering from the stresses of modern life. McCoy noted Kirk's reaction upon observing the Indian lifestyle on Miramanee's planet, commenting that overpressured leader types like starship captains often exhibited the Tahiti Syndrome. (“The Paradise Syndrome” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],5:[1,#B],12:[1,#B],36:[1,#B]@1Tahna Los@2(Jeffrey Nordling). Bajoran terrorist and member of the militant Kohn-ma splinter group who stopped at nothing to assure Bajor's independence from outside forces. In 2369, he attempted to destroy one side of the wormhole in hopes of minimizing Bajor's importance to the Federation and the Cardassians. He was not successful. (“Past Prologue” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#BI],4:[1,#BI]@1tai chi@2SEE: Mok'bara.
~1: [1, #b], 27: [1, #b], 29: [3, #b], 44: [2, #b]@1Taibak@2(John Fleck). Romulan scientist who developed a neural control device in 2367 that, by using a direct access to the visual interface of La Forge's VISOR, permitted Geordi La Forge to be programmed to commit criminal acts. (“The Mind's Eye” [TNG]). SEE: E-band emissions.
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],13:[2,#I]@1Tajor, Glinn@2(Mic Rogers). Aide to Gul Lemec during talks aboard the Starship Enterprise -D in 2369. (“Chain of Command, Part I” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],17:[1,#I],106:[1,#B]@1Takarans@2Humanoid race with vaguely reptilian features. Little was known about the Takarans until 2369, when Enterprise -D chief medical officer Beverly Crusher was given an opportunity to autopsy a member of the race. Crusher discovered that the Takarans did not have organs in the traditional sense; rather, Takaran internal physiology was homogeneous throughout the body. This made the Takarans extremely difficult to injure or kill. Effective damage would have to be done on a cellular level. Crusher also discovered that Takarans were able to control the rate of their cellular physiology, allowing them to put themselves into a state resembling death. (“Suspicions” [TNG]). SEE: Jo'Bril.
~
~1:[1,#BI],33:[1,#I],40:[1,#B],44:[2,#B]@1tal-shaya@2Ancient method of execution on Vulcan that was considered a merciful form of death. Pressure was applied to a specific portion of the victim's neck until it snapped, causing instantaneous death. Tal-shaya was used to murder Tellarite ambassador Gav prior to the Babel Conference of 2267 in an effort to cast suspicion upon the Vulcan ambassador. (“Journey to Babel” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[3,#B],15:[1,#I],21:[3,#B],32:[1,#I]@1Tal@2(Jack Donner). Subcommander on the Romulan battle cruiser that captured the Federation starship Enterprise when the ship crossed the Romulan Neutral Zone in 2268 on a secret spy mission. (“The Enterprise Incident” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],8:[2,#B]@1Talarian hook spider@2Arachnid with half-meter-long legs. Miles O'Brien, who was afraid of spiders, had to get past twenty of these creatures when repairing an emitter array at the starbase on planet Zayra IV. (“Realm of Fear” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],14:[1,#B],19:[1,#I],28:[2,#B],54:[1,#B],57:[1,#I],62:[13,#I]@1Talarian observation craft@2A small vessel used as a training ship for young Talarian males. In 2367, the Enterprise -D discovered one of these craft adrift in Sector 21947. The craft had developed a serious radiation leak in its propulsion system and Dr. Crusher's team evacuated the survivors, including a human youth named Jono, to the Enterprise -D. (“Suddenly Human” [TNG]). The ship model was designed by Rick Sternbach and built by Tony Meininger.
~
~1:[3,#B],11:[2,#B],16:[2,#B],18:[14,#I],32:[2,#BI],34:[1,#I],41:[5,#I],46:[2,#BI],48:[7,#I]@1Talbot, St. John@2(David Warner). Federation diplomatic representative to the Paradise City settlement on planet Nimbus III. (Star Trek V: The Final Frontier). Actor David Warner later played the part of Chancellor Gorkon in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country as well as the Cardassian Gul Madred in “Chain of Command, Part II” (TNG).
~1:[5,#BI],34:[5,#I],45:[7,#I]@1Tale of Two Cities, A@2Novel written by terrestrial author Charles Dickens in 1859. The book was a historical story set during the French Revolution. Spock gave Kirk an antique hardbound copy of A Tale of Two Cities as a birthday gift in 2285. (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan).
~1:[1,#B],10:[2,#B]@1talgonite@2Ceramic substance, used in the construction of the Kataan probe. (“The Inner Light” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#BI],13:[1,#B],20:[3,#B]@1Talmadge, Captain@2Commander of the Dorian, a transport vessel attacked near planet Rekag-Seronia in 2369 while attempting to deliver Ambassador Ves Alkar to that planet in hopes of mediating peace there. (“Man of the People” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],48:[3,#B],77:[2,#B]@1Talos IV@2Class-M planet, formerly the home of a thriving, technically advanced humanoid civilization. Thousands of centuries ago, a terrible nuclear war killed nearly all the planet's inhabitants and nearly rendered the planet itself uninhabitable. As of 2266, contact with Talos IV was a violation of Starfleet General Order 7, a death penalty offense because of the immense and addictive power of the Talosians' illusion technology. (“The Cage,” “The Menagerie, Parts I and II” [TOS]). SEE: Pike, Christopher.
~1:[3,#B],7:[2,#B]@1Talos Star Group@2Location of planet Talos IV. (“The Cage,” “The Menagerie, Part I” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[2,#B],39:[41,#I]@1Talosians@2Dominant humanoid life-form on planet Talos IV. The Talosians were nearly made extinct by nuclear war, and the few survivors clung to life underground, where they became dangerously dependent upon the illusion-creating technology developed by their ancestors. Gene Roddenberry, while forced by production practicality to make the Talosians a humanoid race (so that they could be played by human actors), nevertheless took the imaginative step of casting women in the roles, while dubbing male voices for the characters. (“The Cage,” “The Menagerie, Parts I and II” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],10:[2,#B],25:[2,#B],48:[2,#B],54:[1,#B]@1Taluno, Kai@2Bajoran religious leader who first discovered the Bajoran wormhole. In the 22nd century a ship carrying Kai Taluno was damaged in the Denorios Belt. There, he claimed the heavens opened up and almost swallowed his ship. Bajoran religious faith holds that the phenomenon was the Celestial Temple, home of the Bajoran Prophets. (“Emissary” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],13:[1,#I]@1Tamarian frost@2A sweet beverage, available in the Ten-Forward lounge of the Enterprise -D. (“Hero Worship” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],63:[1,#B],68:[1,#I],77:[2,#B]@1Tamarians@2A humanoid race, first encountered by the Federation in 2268. The Tamarians were faintly reptilian in appearance and their spoken language was based almost entirely on metaphors drawn from their culture's mythology. Early encounters between the Federation and the Tamarians went without incident, but the two societies were unable to communicate. A breakthrough finally came in 2368, when a Tamarian captain, Dathon, confined both himself and Enterprise -D captain Picard on the surface of planet El-Adrel IV. (“Darmok” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],4:[2,#B],21:[1,#B]@1Tamoon@2(Jane Ross). Drill thrall who, in 2268, was responsible for training Chekov to fight in the games on planet Triskelion. (“The Gamesters of Triskelion” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[1,#I],13:[2,#B]@1Tamura, Yeoman@2(Miko Mayama). Member of the Enterprise landing party to planet Eminiar VII in 2267. (“A Taste of Armageddon” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#BI],26:[2,#I],32:[1,#BI]@1Tan Ru@2Alien space probe programmed to gather and sterilize soil samples from distant planets as a precursor to colonization. While it drifted through space, Tan Ru collided with Earth probe Nomad and somehow merged with it. (“The Changeling” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],3:[5,#B]@1Tanagra@2SEE: Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra
~1:[2,#B],9:[3,#B],14:[2,#B],20:[2,#B],23:[2,#B],52:[2,#B]@1Tandro, Enina@2(Fionnula Flanagan). Widow of the late General Ardelon Tandro of planet Klaestron IV. In 2369 her son, Ilon Tandro, accused Jadzia Dax of the murder of his father 30 years before. After Odo contacted her with news of the trial implicating Jadzia Dax, Enina came forward to confess that Curzon Dax was in bed with her at the time of a secret transmission implicating the Trill. She told Jadzia, in confidence, that her husband had betrayed his own people and the rebels had killed him. This fact had been kept secret in order to protect the memory of a man so cherished by his people. Dax had not revealed this information out of Curzon's desire to protect Enina, even if it meant she would have been convicted of a murder Curzon did not commit. (“Dax” [DS9]).
~1:[3,#B],8:[2,#B],48:[2,#B],56:[2,#B],69:[2,#B]@1Tandro, General Ardelon@2Statesman from the planet Klaestron IV who was reportedly murdered in 2339 during a civil war on his planet. He became a national hero after his death, with statues of him erected all over the planet. Ardelon Tandro was good friends with Federation mediator Curzon Dax, but was unaware that his wife, Enina Tandro, was conducting a love affair with Dax. Thirty years later, when Jadzia Dax was accused of Tandro's murder, Dax refused to offer any defense, preferring to be found guilty rather than betray Enina. It was not until Enina came forward and admitted that she had been in bed with Curzon Dax at the time of a secret transmission that Dax was acquitted. Enina also spoke privately with Jadzia Dax, explaining that her late husband had betrayed his own people. The rebels had killed him for it, but that truth would remain secret. (“Dax” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],13:[2,#B],33:[3,#B],44:[2,#B],88:[1,#B],111:[2,#B],115:[2,#B]@1Tandro, Ilon@2(Gregory Itzen). Head of the special diplomatic envoy from planet Klaestron IV who attempted to extradite Jadzia Dax from Deep Space 9 in 2369 for the murder of his father, General Ardelon Tandro. The general, who had been good friends with Curzon Dax, had been murdered 30 years before, but new evidence surfaced in 2369 implicating the Trill host. Tandro maintained that although Curzon Dax was gone, Jadzia Dax could be prosecuted for the murder of his father. The paramount question as to whether a Trill host was responsible for the symbiont's past lives was not addressed because the murder charge was laid to rest when Ardelon's widow, Enina Tandro, revealed that Curzon Dax was in bed with her at the time of the secret transmission that had been the source of the indictment. (“Dax” [DS9]).
~1:[4,#B],9:[3,#B],22:[2,#B],35:[16,#I],54:[12,#I]@1Tango Sierra, Science Station@2Orbital facility at which Dr. Hester Dealt began work in 2365 to cure a deadly outbreak of plasma plague that had stricken the densely populated Rachelis system. (“The Child” [TNG]). Science Station Tango Sierra was a re-use of the Regula I space station model seen in Star Trek II. Regula I was itself a modification of a model originally built for Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
~1:[1,#B],3:[2,#B],12:[1,#B],16:[1,#B],29:[2,#B]@1Tango@2Young Christopher Pike's horse when he was growing up in Mojave on Earth. The Talosians created an illusory version of Tango when Pike was held captive on Talos IV. Tango was fond of sugar cubes. (“The Cage,” “The Menagerie, Part II” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],18:[2,#BI],63:[4,#B]@1Tantalus field@2Covert murder weapon used by the alternate Captain Kirk in the mirror universe aboard the I.S.S. Enterprise. The Tantalus field was a device with a small viewscreen located in the mirror Kirk's quarters and was used to eliminate enemies. The Tantalus field tracked its intended victim, enabling the operator to vaporize the victim by remote control. (“Mirror, Mirror” [TOS]). SEE: Kirk, James T. (mirror).
~1:[2,#B],7:[4,#B],51:[2,#B],67:[19,#I]@1Tantalus V@2Penal colony administered by Dr. Simon Van Gelder. Tantalus V was located on a distant planet and protected by a forcefield, preventing transporter use or other possible escape. Considerably advanced beyond early prisons, Tantalus V was more of a hospital for sick minds. One treatment developed there, a neural neutralizer, was found to have deadly effects on its patients. (“Dagger of the Mind” [TOS]). Named for the Greek mythic figure who stole ambrosia from the tables of the gods, feeding it to mortals.
~1:[2,#B],9:[3,#B],16:[1,#B]@1Tanuga IV@2Class-M planet at which the late Dr. Nel Apgar attempted to develop a Krieger-wave converter. Apgar was killed when his space station exploded in 2366. (“A Matter of Perspective”[TNG]).
~1: [1, #b], 37: [1, #i], 40: [2, #b], 52: [3, #b]@1Tanugans@2The humanoid residents of Tanuga IV. Tanugans are distinguished by their prominent eyebrow and forehead ridges. The Tanugan system of justice held that the accused were guilty until proven innocent, which became a problem for Enterprise -D Commander William Riker when he was accused of the murder of Tanugan scientist Dr. Nel Apgar in 2366. (“A Matter of Perspective” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],6:[1,#B],8:[1,#B]@1Tarahong detention center@2Institution where Quark's cousin, Barbo, was incarcerated for selling defective warp drives to the Tarahong government. (“The Nagus” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],10:[2,#B],31:[2,#B]@1Tarbolde, Phineas@2Poet on the Canopus Planet who wrote Nightingale Woman in 1996, considered to be one of the most passionate love sonnets written in the past couple of centuries. Gary Mitchell was able to quote the sonnet after exposure to the barrier at the edge of the galaxy. (“Where No Man Has Gone Before” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],12:[1,#B],15:[1,#B]@1Tarkassian razorbeast@2Animal that has a propensity for leaping about. Young Guinan tempted young Ro to start jumping on the bed like a Tarkassian razorbeast. (“Rascals” [TNG]). When Guinan was a child, a tarcassian razor beast was her imaginary friend; the creature protected her and made her feel safe. She described it as huge, covered with brown fur, and having enormous spiny wings. Guinan fondly recalled that it was very frightening, especially when it smiled. As Guinan grew older, the razorbeast faded away, leaving behind only the idea, but Guinan still talked to it occasionally. (“Imaginary Friend” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],76:[2,#BI],140:[1,#I],144:[3,#B],148:[2,#B],154:[1,#I],175:[28,#I]@1Tarchannen III@2Class-M planet that was the site of a Federation outpost. Tarchannen III was home to an unusual life-form that reproduced by planting a strand of DNA into a host body. The DNA strand would eventually take over the host body, causing it to metamorphose into a non-sentient reptilian humanoid. It is believed that all 49 members of the Tarchannen outpost suffered this fate in 2362 when contact was lost with the outpost. The U.S.S. Victory, dispatched to investigate the outpost, sent an away team to the planet. Five years later, all five members of the away team were irresistibly compelled to return to the planet, apparently part of the metamorphosis process. Three members of the away team completed the metamorphosis and were irretrievably lost. The process was identified by Dr. Beverly Crusher in time to save former Victory away team members Geordi La Forge and Susanna Leijten from the same fate. Enterprise -D captain Picard ordered warning beacons placed around Tarchannen III so the planet would not be revisited. (“Identity Crisis” [TNG]). The transformed versions of the Tarchannen III creatures were played by popular Los Angeles area radio personalities Mark and Brian, who called themselves the Lizard Creatures from Hell.
~1:[1,#B],72:[1,#B]@1Tarella@2Class-M planet that once supported humanoid life-forms. Years ago, a deadly biological weapon was created during a war between the inhabitants of two landmasses. The resulting disease wiped out the planet's population. A few Tarellians escaped to other worlds, infecting those planets as well. The remaining Tarellians were hunted as plague carriers, and many were killed by races fearful of contamination. The last eight survivors of Tarella headed toward planet Haven in 2364. (“Haven” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],6:[1,#B]@1Tarellians@2Humanoid race from planet Tarella who were nearly wiped out by a deadly biological weapon during the Tarellian wars. (“Haven” [TNG]).
~1: [1, #bi], 6: [1, #b], 9: [1, #i], 20: [1, #i], 25: [1, #i], 38: [1, #bi], 39: [8, #i], 54: [13, #i], 73: [3, #i]@1targ@2Furry piglike Klingon animal. Worf had a targ as a pet when he was young, and an illusory targ once appeared on the Enterprise -D bridge. (“Where No One Has Gone Before” [TNG]). SEE: heart of targ. We wonder if either Commander Kruge's pet (in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock) or the jackal-like pet of the Klingon warden at the Rura Penthe prison (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country) were also targs.
~1:[2,#B],14:[2,#B]@1Targhee moonbeast@2Life-form noted for its loud bray. The sound produced by a Valtese horn was said to resemble the moonbeast's call. (“The Perfect Mate” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#BI],13:[2,#B],17:[1,#B],22:[2,#I],53:[1,#I],58:[4,#I],64:[8,#I],72:[1,#B],73:[7,#I]@1Taris Murn@2J'naii shuttle vehicle that was lost inside an area of null space in the J'naii system in 2368. The Taris Murn had a crew of two, who, despite the loss of all electromagnetic power into the null space, remained alive long enough to be rescued by a shuttlecraft from the Enterprise -D. (“The Outcast” [TNG]). The miniature of the Taris Murn, seen only briefly, was a re-use of the Nenebek model originally built for “Final Mission” (TNG).
~1:[2,#B],11:[1,#BI],14:[19,#I]@1Taris, Subcommander@2(Carolyn Seymour). Commanding officer of the Romulan Warbird Haakona. (“Contagion” [TNG]). Carolyn Seymour also played Commander Toreth in “Face of the Enemy” (TNG) and Mirasta Yale in “First Contact” (TNG).
~1:[1,#B],6:[1,#B]@1Tark@2(Joseph Bernard). Father to Kara, the Argelian dancer. (“Wolf in the Fold” [TOS]).
~
~1:[1,#B],8:[1,#B],53:[3,#B],61:[2,#I],72:[1,#B]@1Tarmin@2(David Sage). The head of an Ullian delegation of telepathic researchers. Tarmin was a researcher who described himself as an “archaeologist of the mind.” He worked for years to compile a database of memories that would serve as a library for cultural research. Tarmin was briefly implicated in three cases of telepathic memory intrusion rape that occurred on the Starship Enterprise -D in 2368. He was cleared when his son, Jev, was found to be guilty of the telepathic rapes. (“Violations” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],6:[3,#B],12:[1,#B]@1Tarod IX@2Planet near the Romulan Neutral Zone attacked by the Borg in 2364, although Romulan activity was initially suspected. (“The Neutral Zone” [TNG]).
~1:[5,#B],11:[1,#B],52:[2,#B]@1Tarquin Hill, The Master of@2An unknown artist of planet Kurl, the Master of Tarquin Hill lived some 12,000 years ago. The Master of Tarquin Hill was so named by later archaeologists who have come to know and respect the visionary artistry and influence of his work. (“The Chase” [TNG]). SEE: Kurlan Naiskos.
~1:[2,#B],9:[1,#B],12:[22,#I],34:[1,#BI],35:[4,#I]@1Tarsas III@2Earthlike planet around which orbits Starbase 74. (“11001001” [TNG]). Of course, the reason Tarsas III was so Earthlike was that the Starbase 74 exterior visual effects shots were re-uses of the Spacedock scenes originally created for Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.
~1:[3,#B],23:[1,#I],38:[1,#I]@1Tarses, Crewman Simon@2(Spencer Garrett). A native of Mars colony, Crewman First Class Tarses was assigned as a medical technician aboard the Enterprise -D in 2366. Tarses was accused as a conspirator in the Romulan theft of Enterprise -D technical data in 2367. While Tarses was not guilty of the theft, he had lied on his Starfleet entrance papers, concealing the fact that his paternal grandfather was Romulan. When this fact was brought out during the conspiracy hearings, Tarses feared his career in Starfleet was over. (“The Drumhead” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],10:[2,#B],17:[1,#B],42:[2,#B],44:[18,#I]@1Tarsian War@2A conflict fought by the people of Angosia III in the mid-24th century. The Angosian government utilized extensive biochemical and psychological manipulation on their soldiers in order that they might more effectively fight this war. (“The Hunted” [TNG]). SEE: Danar, Roga. The episode does not make clear who the Angosians were fighting, or if it was a civil war.
~1:[2,#B],26:[1,#B],85:[2,#B],96:[4,#B],101:[2,#B]@1Tarsus IV@2Location of an Earth colony that suffered a terrible famine in 2246 when an exotic fungus nearly destroyed the food supply. Colony governor Kodos declared martial law, and ordered half of the population, some 4,000 colonists, put to death in order to insure the survival of the remainder. Although relief arrived, it was too late to prevent the executions. Kodos was believed dead following discovery of a burned body, but it was later learned that Kodos had escaped, living under the name Anton Karidian. Only nine eyewitnesses to the killings survived, among them James Kirk, Kevin Riley, and Thomas Leighton. (“The Conscience of the King” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B]@1Tartaran landscapes@2Collection of artwork in Quark's quarters on Deep Space 9. Quark wanted to take two voluptuous women — created from his imagination by unknown aliens from the Gamma Quadrant — to his quarters to view his collection of Tartaran landscapes. They seemed willing enough. (“If Wishes Were Horses” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],16:[1,#B]@1Tartaras V@2Planet where the ruins of the Rokai provincial capital were discovered in 2369. Vash decided to explore the ruins on Tartaras V instead of returning to Earth after her visit to Deep Space 9. (“Q-Less” [DS9]).
~1:[3,#B],21:[1,#I]@1Tarvokian pound cake@2A dessert favorite of Lieutenant Worf, who made one to welcome Cadet Wesley Crusher back to the Enterprise -D in 2368. (“The Game” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],3:[2,#B]@1Tasha@2SEE: Yar, Natasha.
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B]@1taspar egg@2The ova of a Cardassian fowl. Boiled taspar egg is considered a delicacy on Cardassia. However, the raw egg of the taspar is considered revolting to Cardassians. (“Chain of Command, Part II” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],9:[1,#B],30:[1,#I]@1Tataglia@2A noted concert violinist whose performance style Data programmed himself to emulate. Data utilized this style for a Mozart concert in honor of Ambassador Sarek's visit to the Enterprise -D in 2366. (“Sarek” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],11:[1,#B]@1Tau Alpha C@2A very distant world, home to the Traveler. Little is known about this planet, except that its humanoid inhabitants are extremely advanced. (“Where No One Has Gone Before” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],10:[2,#B]@1Tau Ceti III@2Planet where Jean-Luc Picard once met Captain Rixx some time prior to 2364. (“Conspiracy” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],21:[1,#I],24:[3,#B]@1Tau Ceti@2Star located some 8 light-years from the Sol System. Site where a Romulan vessel was defeated by the Enterprise using the Cochrane deceleration maneuver. (“Whom Gods Destroy” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],11:[2,#B],19:[2,#B],23:[3,#B],43:[1,#B]@1Tau Cygna V@2Class-H world, desert-like, and bathed in hazardous hyperonic radiation. The planet was ceded to the Sheliak Corporate by the Treaty of Armens in 2255. A Federation colony was established there in the 2270s in violation of that agreement. The Sheliak demanded removal of the colony in 2366 under the terms of the treaty. (“The Ensigns of Command” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#BI],21:[1,#B],23:[1,#B],51:[1,#I],54:[7,#I]@1Taurus II@2Class-M planet on which Shuttlecraft Galileo, under the command of Mr. Spock, crashed in 2267. Shuttle crew members Latimer and Gaetano were killed by indigenous humanoid creatures on the planet. The humanoids were described as “huge, furry creatures” approximately 4 meters tall and possessing crude stone spears. (“The Galileo Seven” [TOS]). Named for the constellation Taurus (the bull).
~1: [1, #b], 14: [2, #b], 18: [2, #b]@1Tava@2(Sachi Parker). A physician on planet Malcor III who helped care for William Riker, masquerading as Rivas Jakara at the Sikla Medical facility in 2367. (“First Contact” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],14:[2,#B],28:[10,#I]@1Tavela Minor@2Federation planet that Dr. Crusher suggested as a good place for Alyssa Ogawa to take a vacation with her new male friend. (“Imaginary Friend” [TNG]). The episode script said “Telana,” but Crusher clearly said “Tavela.”
~1:[1,#B],4:[1,#B],8:[3,#B],19:[1,#B],34:[3,#B]@1Taxco@2(Constance Towers). Arbazan ambassador who visited Deep Space 9 in 2369 on a fact-finding mission to the wormhole. Taxco initially expressed dissatisfaction with the accommodations on the station, but later softened when Dr. Julian Bashir's quick thinking saved her life. (“The Forsaken” [DS9]).
~1:[3,#B],14:[2,#B],23:[3,#B],27:[2,#B],64:[6,#I]@1Taylor, Dr. Gillian@2(Catherine Hicks). Twentieth-century marine biologist and assistant director of the Cetacean Institute on Earth. Taylor supervised the care of George and Gracie, two humpback whales living in captivity at the institute. She was distraught when the two whales had to be released into the open ocean, but she later traveled, with Kirk and the two humpbacks, to the 23rd century. (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home).