MWSOG: Milky Way Society of Organics and Geology

10 sites on Rocky Body. Radius 664KM, MAJOR Silicate Magma. I finished after scanning 3/4 of all canyons:

29. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 46,01 / -117,07 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
30. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 46,08 / -105,96 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
31. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 43,59 / -102,13 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
32. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 30,58 / -58,64 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
33. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 9,24 / 123,62 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
34. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 5,8 / 133,05 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
35. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: -30,73 / -58,49 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
36. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 24,82 / 3,42 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
37. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 37,34 / -14,71 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)
38. SYSTEM: Prooe Drye GG-A c28-0 -- BODY: D 2 -- COORD: 57.67 / 45.93 -- TYPE: Rocky Magma (Silicate Magma)

Excellent Arnul, more or less what I would expect, if I can find 5 sites while only scanning the daylight side of a body ten or more is a very likely possibility, I just don't want to be to optimistic :D
 
I found two new systems witch Cone Fungus:

System: Orion Sector WE-Z c7
Body: C 1
Coord: -46.07 : 90.08

===========================================

System: Running Man Sector EB-X c1-11
Body: B 2 a
Coord: -44.20 : -13.80

I found them using this pattern:
- body without atmosphere[smile]
- temp. between 227 K - 423 K
- volcanism - I didn't try bodies without but... if you can't find organics you can always find new volcanic site so bodies with volcanism are better
- Cone Fungus grow (?) in deep, dark kanyons (or near)
- they likes dark side of the body - not always
- it's better to search them using radar during glide flying because they are visible form less than 3 km by day and 1 km by night
- Cone Fungus always appears as Big POI which shrink after few seconds

And my pattern to find Brain Trees:
- body without atmosphere[smile]
- temp. between 209 K - 300 K
- volcanism
- in the middle of craters which looks "new" (straight walls, and strips around) - somthing like that:
You call it here splash craters.
- I suggest to search 2-3 craters to find out if Trees are present
- Brain Trees are visible on radar as Big POI

Trees and Fungus are not present in every part of Milky Way but nearly sure they are findable there:

Excellent finds. I'm currently looking for more bark mounds out in the Clown nebula and my search strategy lines up with your own. One question though: do the bark mounds you found live on bodies with "major" silicate vapour volcanism, "minor", or is it left unremarked? The one field I found is on a moon with "major" volcanism. Happy future hunting.
 
Excellent finds. I'm currently looking for more bark mounds out in the Clown nebula and my search strategy lines up with your own. One question though: do the bark mounds you found live on bodies with "major" silicate vapour volcanism, "minor", or is it left unremarked? The one field I found is on a moon with "major" volcanism. Happy future hunting.


System: Orion Sector WE-Z c7 - rocky magma volcanism

System: Running Man Sector EB-X c1-11 - major silicate vapour geysers volcanism

I had small trip around known systems with Bark Mounds (Cone Fungus or Bark Mounds is correct?) before I started search for them on my own. I made table which could help You more.
9FbpULY.jpg
 
So, is there any guidelines to how to find these? Are they even tied to some geological parameters, perhaps vaguely realistic or just spawn at random spots?
I'm still failing to find anything. Yesterday I've landed on a tiny tiny moon 300km diameter or so, with water magma volcanism. Spent about 3 hours flying around at about 4km altitude and found absolutely nothing :/
 
As my trip around galaxy comes to an end, and I will be slowing down, here is the movie I made. I decided to record stuff half way through my journey, so unfortunately quite a few great sites exist only on photos, but what can you do, maybe I will come back one day :)
[video=youtube_share;O54dggYMpDM]https://youtu.be/O54dggYMpDM[/video]
 
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So, is there any guidelines to how to find these? Are they even tied to some geological parameters, perhaps vaguely realistic or just spawn at random spots?
I'm still failing to find anything. Yesterday I've landed on a tiny tiny moon 300km diameter or so, with water magma volcanism. Spent about 3 hours flying around at about 4km altitude and found absolutely nothing :/

Cold body vulcanism is the hardest to find, I am assuming this is an ice world?

90% or more of my finds have been in canyons on hot bodies, rocky or iron moons, on ice moons all in canyons, but ice moons usually have far more canyons to search than hot moons and are far harder due to the larger number of search targets. Start with small rocky and metallic bodies. Also as far as I know there have been no finds of life on cold moons.
 
System: Orion Sector WE-Z c7 - rocky magma volcanism

System: Running Man Sector EB-X c1-11 - major silicate vapour geysers volcanism

I had small trip around known systems with Bark Mounds (Cone Fungus or Bark Mounds is correct?) before I started search for them on my own. I made table which could help You more.

Thanks Arnul! Interesting that they appear on metallic and rocky magma volcanic worlds. I've limited my searches to silicate vapour geysers. I find that iron magma volcanism is often on bodies that are too hot for life -- but of course this isn't universally true.

+ virtual rep as I can't give you any more real rep :)
 
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Alright, got a couple new one for you tonight. Coming from the Trifid of the North Sector:

System:Trifid of the North Sector HR-W D1-8
Body:F 1
Lat:37.60°
Long:-161.61°
Iron Magma Fumarole





System:Trifid of the North Sector IR-W D1-3
Body:C 3
Lat:3.79°
Long:-26.49°
Iron Magma Lava Spout

 
Cold body vulcanism is the hardest to find, I am assuming this is an ice world?

90% or more of my finds have been in canyons on hot bodies, rocky or iron moons, on ice moons all in canyons, but ice moons usually have far more canyons to search than hot moons and are far harder due to the larger number of search targets. Start with small rocky and metallic bodies. Also as far as I know there have been no finds of life on cold moons.

Do these sites show up as POI at all, or can be located only by eyes from small distance?
 
Thanks Arnul! Interesting that they appear on metallic and rocky magma volcanic worlds. I've limited my searches to silicate vapour geysers. I find that iron magma volcanism is often on bodies that are too hot for life -- but of course this isn't universally true.

+ virtual rep as I can't give you any more real rep :)

If I may suggest:
- volcanic type doesn't matter, pay attention on temperature: min: 227K max:423K
- try to start searching around or inside nebulas
 

Deleted member 38366

D
Methane Magma
Arapi 11 A
Coordinates : 4.59 | -87.18
(never seen Methane Magma before... and of course the way my luck goes, my find is in a dark spot so I hardly get good shots out of it :p )

ELITE-Arapi11A-MethaneMagma-1.jpg


ELITE-Arapi11A-MethaneMagma-2.jpg


ELITE-Arapi11A-MethaneMagma-3.jpg


ELITE-Arapi11A-MethaneMagma-4.jpg


ELITE-Arapi11A-MethaneMagma-5.jpg

Methane Magma
Arapi 11 A
Coordinates : 3.96 | -108.71
(2nd site found - but this one is extremely passive)

ELITE-Arapi11A-MethaneMagma-B1.jpg


ELITE-Arapi11A-MethaneMagma-B2.jpg
 
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Actually very small (400km) are not good either, because typically glide is too short, for me ideal are 700-900 km radius.

There's a lot to do with density as well as radius in glide height, typically glide height will start a lot lower on icy less dense moons than on the same size denser rocky/metallic moons. I can glide a long way on small bodies, but sometimes it just exits glide way up for apparently no reason.
 
There's a lot to do with density as well as radius in glide height, typically glide height will start a lot lower on icy less dense moons than on the same size denser rocky/metallic moons. I can glide a long way on small bodies, but sometimes it just exits glide way up for apparently no reason.

I just do not like small bodies, because the surface is not even on short distances, the tick can have dramatic effect, I had one when I entered the glide at 22 km and then I had the tick straight away dropping me to 12 km, and then I had to keep it at fairly steep -10 degrees angle, so my glide distance was minimal, and after that I avoid them. But of course experiences will vary, If I want to search one then I do, I just prefer slightly bigger ones.
 

Deleted member 38366

D
On rough Planet Surfaces where the Glide is prematurely terminated frequently at low but valid Glide angles, my Rule of Thumb :

Minimum Glide Angle = Altitude / 2

Works for me.
 
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I just do not like small bodies, because the surface is not even on short distances, the tick can have dramatic effect, I had one when I entered the glide at 22 km and then I had the tick straight away dropping me to 12 km, and then I had to keep it at fairly steep -10 degrees angle, so my glide distance was minimal, and after that I avoid them. But of course experiences will vary, If I want to search one then I do, I just prefer slightly bigger ones.

And if you go the correct direction around a small body you can glide 2 or 3 times as far, I have had my height getting all the way down to 11 or so kms then suddenly jump up to around 30 and just keep gliding :D
 
And if you go the correct direction around a small body you can glide 2 or 3 times as far, I have had my height getting all the way down to 11 or so kms then suddenly jump up to around 30 and just keep gliding :D

Yes that true, I typically hunt for background views, so another reason I need bigger bodies, on small one like 400km it is quite difficult to get the right view for longer than short glide :)
 

Deleted member 38366

D
Silicate Vapour Geysers
53 Virginis B 4 A
Coordinates : -6.69 | -19.65

ELITE-53VirginisB4A-SilicateVapourGeysers-1.jpg


ELITE-53VirginisB4A-SilicateVapourGeysers-2.jpg

Silicate Vapour Geysers
53 Virginis B 4 C A
Coordinates : 11.97 | -32.58

ELITE-53VirginisB4CA-SilicateVapourGeysers-1.jpg


ELITE-53VirginisB4CA-SilicateVapourGeysers-2.jpg


ELITE-53VirginisB4CA-SilicateVapourGeysers-3.jpg
 
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