Post by Sinn on Feb 18, 2015 1:50:34 GMT
Known as the most treachorous and dismal body of water on Earth, the Weddell sea is dominated by brutally massive waves and enormous slabs of ice, in equal concentration and quantity.
It is 6,895 feet below the surface of the frigid, surprisingly clear water that the Dinobot Grimlock makes his way inexorably across the seafloor, red light pooring from the slit in his helm that serves as a visor. More still radiates from his massive, firey sword, which sets the water aboil with heat despite the great cold and pressure around it.
The Dinobot has been walking for hours, each stride eating up nearly thirty feet at a time as he crosses the muddy, relatively barren ocean floor. From time to time he sees the ruined bones of long dead whales, creatures which, by their majestic remains alone, inspire a grudging respect in the Dinobot. Once, so far, he has happened upon a wrecked ship. Knowing nothing of humans, he knows nothing of the boats, and so he dismisses them as detritus, the result of some people too feeble to be bothered about, even when it comes to a moment of thought.
The fifty-foot, 68 ton juggernaut of metal and energon has not been detected by human scans yet, but it is only a matter of time before he is.
It is 6,895 feet below the surface of the frigid, surprisingly clear water that the Dinobot Grimlock makes his way inexorably across the seafloor, red light pooring from the slit in his helm that serves as a visor. More still radiates from his massive, firey sword, which sets the water aboil with heat despite the great cold and pressure around it.
The Dinobot has been walking for hours, each stride eating up nearly thirty feet at a time as he crosses the muddy, relatively barren ocean floor. From time to time he sees the ruined bones of long dead whales, creatures which, by their majestic remains alone, inspire a grudging respect in the Dinobot. Once, so far, he has happened upon a wrecked ship. Knowing nothing of humans, he knows nothing of the boats, and so he dismisses them as detritus, the result of some people too feeble to be bothered about, even when it comes to a moment of thought.
The fifty-foot, 68 ton juggernaut of metal and energon has not been detected by human scans yet, but it is only a matter of time before he is.