Reviews For Invasion
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Reviewer: angeloflife Signed [Report This]
Date: September 30 2014 2:42 AM Title: Chapter 20...A Gremlin's Gotta Do What a Gremlin's Gotta Do

Letting you know that you still have people reading the story and that the little amount of reviews should not let you stop doing the story.

I didn't think the humans would have a hard time breathing in the building, i was thinking that it was 5 miles to a human but shorter to an ingress also that their planet would have air still up that high.

If not, you saying that the ingress can breath in more thinner air than a human can?

 

I look forward to hearing that secret orgins of the Ingress, if you are going to tell how they came to be or something.



Author's Response: Thanks for still giving me reviews. I really do enjoy them. When I envisioned the Ingress homeworld, I wanted to include the ability for humans to be able to survive there. That's means things like gravity, atmospheric pressure, temp etc. would have to be like Earth. Now assuming the air pressure is the same in a domed city, it would stand to resin the higher up you went the thinner the air would be. The average altitude one could naturally breathe extends to 8000 or for some adapted humans like Peruvians 12,500 ft. After that, hypoxia sets in and eventually will kill( unless aids such as drugs or air canisters are available) . This is why jets are pressurized and even bomber crews wore air masks. So a building 5 miles up wouldn't kill a human immediately but would kill them within a day. The Ingress, because of their size, adapted to this problem (most likely by more lung tissue and alveoli, and superior cardio systems). Whew... long answer but it was a good question. Other questions on how the Ingress came to be will be answered I. The next chapter.

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