The title may allude to a line of dialogue from LDâs first episode, âSecond Contactâ, where Mariner says she was once trapped in a sentient cave for weeks: âYou ever been trapped in a sentient cave? Thatâs a dark place that knows things.â
This episode consists mainly of flashbacks to unseen adventures in caves, but since these are new ones, it doesnât qualify as a clip show like TNG: âShades of Grayâ.
The Cerritos is in orbit around the planet Grottonus. Mariner hates caves, probably due to her experience described above. Boimler remarks that caves kind of look the same, a sly reference to the reuse of cave sets in various TNG-era series.
Mariner sarcastically mentions how rocks successfully block centuries of technological process. In LD: âMining the Mindâs Minesâ, itâs said that itâs not a real day in Starfleet until comms get blocked.
Tendi talks about being trapped together (in a turbolift) right after the ârage virusâ outbreak. We didnât see them being trapped, but the rage virus incident happened in the first LD episode, âSecond Contactâ. Picard was trapped in a turbolift with some children in TNG: âDisasterâ, and Una was trapped in a turbolift with Spock in ST: âQ and Aâ.
LT Steve Levy is a science officer best known for claiming that Wolf 359 was an inside job and that the Dominion War didnât happen (LD: âNo Small Partsâ). Gammanite is a fictional element that Levy used to boost communications signals in a previously unseen adventure. Heâs voiced by Fred Tatasciore, who also voices Shax.
This is Kyron IVâs first appearance in lore. Coincidentally, Kyron IV was the name of a character in the fantasy comic book Soul Saga by Steven Platt, the character being King of the Dominion and father to Princess Persephone. Also, a chyron is the term for an electronically generated superimposed caption (named after the Chyron corporation).
In the flashbacks, our Lower Deckers are wearing LT jg pips, which places these after LD: âTwovixâ.
Vendorians are a shapeshifting race first seen in TAS: âThe Survivorâ. A Vendorian was last seen in LD: âEnvoysâ on Tulgana IV, disguised as an Andorian. Vendor Prime was seen on a star chart in PIC: âMaps and Legendsâ, which placed it within the territory of the Romulan Free State, in the Beta Quadrant (in LDs time that would place it within the Romulan Star Empire).
Boimler lists Levyâs conspiracy theories: Wolf 359 wasnât real, Q doesnât exist, Picard is a hologram and the Doctor isnât (he also believes they are living in the Mirror Universe). Levyâs description of Vendorian brood pods and young bursting out of chests is reminiscent of Gorn breeding practices as mentioned in SNW.
Levy claims the Vendorians falsified data that going at warp speed damages subspace. If this is correct, that provides a canon explanation for why the Warp 5 limit imposed in TNG: âForce of Natureâ was quickly forgotten after TNG ended. Previously, it was suggested by off-screen sources that either warp engine design was improved so as to prevent such ecological damage or that the variable geometry nacelle pylons seen in the Intrepid-class were also supposed to compensate for it.
The idea that the Vendorians are putting people through tests of character and morality is new, although such tests are usually from more powerful or omnipotent species, like the Metrons in TOS: âArenaâ, the Melkotians in TOS: âSpectre of the Gunâ, the Vians from TOS: âThe Empath, the Q from TNG, and so on.
This is the first mention of Porgian swamp rash, although Porgs are the cute little penguin-like creatures seen in Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Also the first appearance of Balkus IX. The Star Wars reference may not be a coincidence, since the brain-eating Grafflax sounds like âGraflexâ - the Graflex 2 Flash Gun was used as the basis for Anakin/Lukeâs lightsaber prop in Star Wars: A New Hope and itâs still called a Graflex lightsaber in fan circles.
Thusa transferring her âbase mind by dermal contactâ to Rutherford is reminiscent of Spock transferring his katra to McCoy at the climax of ST II, except that this transfers their consciousness into a protein mass that creates a cloned infant version of themselves. Rapid alien-induced pregnancies are also a trope in Star Trek, most notably in TNG: âThe Childâ with Troi and in ENT: âUnexpectedâ with Trip.
The trope of an apparent monster turning out to be defending her offspring turns up in TOS: âThe Devil in the Darkâ.
Delta Shift were our Beta Shift Lower Deckersâ nemeses in previous seasons (LD: âTerminal Provocationsâ, âRoom for Growthâ). The ones accompanying Mariner are ENS Karavitus, ENS Asif and ENS Amadou. ENS Moxy is not present.
The shuttle that Mariner crashes is the Kings Canyon. As with all Cerritos shuttles, named after a Californian National Park. She was last seen in LD: âIn the Cradle of Vexilonâ.
âDunselâ is a term used by midshipmen at Starfleet Academy to describe a part that serves no useful purpose (TOS: âThe Ultimate Computerâ). Rutherford used the same term in LD: âThe Stars at Nightâ. Pergium is an element used as fuel in nuclear reactors (TOS: âThe Devil in the Darkâ). Amadou and Mariner pronounce it with a hard G, i.e. âPER-gi-umâ, when in the original episode it was pronounced âper-JEE-umâ.
As Mariner ages, she gets a grey streak through her hair like her mother, Captain Freeman.
Mariner says theyâll get TâAna to grow Asif a new leg. She may be referring to the biosynthetic limbs used as prosthetics (DS9: âItâs Only a Paper Moonâ), which use synthetic muscles in their construction.
Tendâs flashback begins right at the end of âSecond Contactâ, with the same dialogue from the episode, with the ship still showing damage from the rage virus outbreak.
Synthehol is indeed supposed to affect the people like alcohol, except that its intoxicating effects could be dismissed at will (TNG: âRelicsâ). However, starships still carried supplies of real alcoholic drinks as the taste difference was allegedly apparent to connoisseurs.
A targ is a Klingon animal, like a cross between a boar and a dog with spikes on its back, kept as pets (TNG: âWhere No One Has Gone Beforeâ).
Tendi mentions another unseen cave story where they met themselves, but they turned out to be aliens from the future pretending to be them, harkening to story elements from episodes like TNG: âTime Squaredâ and TNG: âFuture Imperfectâ.