Gameable:
Pluto probably has an ocean of liquid water deep inside it.
Also:
the surface of Pluto’s informally-named Sputnik Planum, a massive ice plain larger than Texas, [that’s the bright “heart” people picked out on the first photos] is devoid of any detectable craters and estimated to be… no more than 10 million years old.
While on Charon the great equatorial expanse of smooth plains… informally named Vulcan Planum (home of the “moated mountains” informally named Kubrick and Clarke Mons) is likely a vast cryovolcanic flow or flows that erupted onto Charon’s surface about 4 billion years ago…. likely related to the freezing of an internal ocean that globally ruptured Charon’s crust.
So Charon suffered a cataclysmic ocean freezing event and cracked, but Pluto stays whole, except from a rupture 10 million years ago that iced over.
#SpaceWarMeansSpaceRefugees
#helloYuggoth
Originally shared by Paul Scott Anderson
http://planetaria.ca/2016/03/pluto-revealed-five-new-science-papers-highlight-discoveries-new-horizons///cdn.embedly.com/widgets/platform.js

Well of course.
It’s hollow, the inner surface covered by a frigid arctic sea lit only by the shimmering light that passes through the shell from below…and only when Pluto is closest to the Sun.
There are islands in that crystal gloaming, where a race of grim people make their living hunting the strange creatures that rise, hungry, from the depths.
In their turn, this hardy race prays daily to cthonic gods of light that today will not be one where the strange, batlike G’Rom come flapping down from above with their nets and their tridents, glaring at them with great, lamp-like eyes as they snare meat for their own pots.
And so it was for ten million years. Until we came.
http://www.art.com/products/p12371078-sa-i1738387/frank-r-paul-furry-bats-from-pluto.htm
I mean, I thought that was obvious?
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