The Dark wrote:I'm afraid I'll have to respectfully decline your request to prove a negative,
You're the one expecting me to disprove the claim that a character is lying. You may as well point out that with the corruption of language in 40K, it could be something entirely different, brand named after an ancient terran herbicide, and a 40K Watt might be equal to seven point six nine RL joules per second. All of these are essentially similar propositions, in that they play on the unknowns of the setting to alter the results of analysing the source material.
since the rules of logic dislike being defied. However, weighing the evidence strongly suggests the adept is lying:
Observations:
[...]
5. 2,4-D is teratogenic to rats and possibly to humans; it would not be an excessive stretch to presume it is a teratogen to the partially pseudo-mammalian Ork physiology.
So the
entirely alien and comprehensively magical ork biology is especially affected by this, as well as finding it toxic in some poorly explained way. Very good carry on.
In short, the characteristics of what is being do not match with 2,4-D. Its stated reason for being at the facility is nonsense,
Ignoring for a moment that the facility was in a broadleaf forest of some kind (if you must postulate a lie or mistake on the part of a character, go for a small one - with him having a verbal slip and saying 'mould' instead of 'creepers' 'vines' or anything else on the walls), this rather depends on what the "moulds" on that particular planet are sensative to.
and its behavior does not match its known real-world characteristics. Either physical laws are different in the 40k universe,
Which they are demonstrated to be... Both in the form of various funk-tastic alternate universes interacting which we've never seen in reality, and in the plethora of physical laws which must exist in the 40K universe of which we have no knowledge...
Some
very strange things happen with alien biology in 40k, directly influenced by the interaction of those dimensions. Ork spore cells multiply faster when they're put near other ork cells (which alone, makes them something
completely and bafflingly different from a true fungus), even when there's no interaction between them. Eldar cells react to being observed by a sapient being. At least some of the Old Ones' creations clearly interact with the warp on a cellular level.
or the adept is mistaken about what he used.
You're right, this wasn't the best analogy. Given the ubiqitousness of 2,4-D in agriculture,
Twenty thousand year obsolete agriculture, based around entirely alien staple foodsuffs from the Imperium's (observe the ubiquity of 'Grox' and 'Ploin' (of course, it's rather remarkable they can eat anything alien, but there's some material about that in Dark Heresy) in the 40K diet compared with mention of modern foodstuffs, the main diet appears to be alien species which are presumably raised in an enviroments with plants developed from entirely different origins to Earth ones)
it would be more similar to Signs. Given that 2,4-D is the most common herbicide on Earth (used on wheat and small grains, sorghum, corn, rice, sugar cane, low-till soybeans, rangeland, and pasture), if this was the chemical in use
Who says it is in use on agri worlds? Oh yes. You. It is notable for being used on
Catachan, one world, where they probably have a particularly strong interest in herbicides; Darvus does
not describe it as 'the stuff they use on agri-worlds.'
Just because it's widely used on modern Earth, does not mean it is going to be well known in 40K. If that were the case, then goddam
low profile tanks would be everywhere.
and it has the effects stated, Orkish invasions of Agri Worlds should end quickly with them melting. Since this hasn't been recorded, the evidence suggests what was used is not 2,4-D