List of Doctor Who planets




Wikimedia list article




This is a list of planets, fictional or otherwise, that are mentioned in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who and its spinoff literature, audio plays, television series and comics.






A




  • Abydos is a leisure planet mentioned in The Leisure Hive, hosting non-gravity swimming pools, sleep-reading stations for accelerated learning and robotic gladiatorial games.[1]


  • Adipose 3 is the lost breeding planet of the Adipose.[2] In "The Stolen Earth", Davros is revealed to be responsible for its disappearance.[3] The planet is returned to its rightful place in "Journey's End".[4]


  • Agora is the homeworld of the Sixth Doctor's companion Grant Markham. In 2191, the Cybermen attempted to convert the planet into a Cybermen breeding ground to rebuild their race in the Virgin Missing Adventures book, Killing Ground.[5]


  • Akhaten was a parasitic, sentient astronomical object that fed on the souls of the Sun-singers of Akhet. He was considered by the people of the neighbouring worlds to be a great and fearsome god. Within his rings was the asteroid Tiaanamat, on which was held the Festival of Offerings, which served to keep him asleep.


  • Alfava Metraxis[6] is the seventh planet in the Dundra System in the Garn Belt, and was once home to the extinct Aplans. It was terraformed in the 49th century and colonised by humans sometime before the 51st century. It is home to more than one "maze of the dead", mass tombs where the dead are supposedly buried in the walls and represented with statues. However, all of the statues are revealed to be Weeping Angels. The Eleventh Doctor, Amy and River Song landed on this planet in the 51st century in "The Time of Angels" after following the path of the spaceship, Byzantium. Alfalfa Metraxis has 11-hour days.[6][7]


  • Algol is a planet mentioned in Destiny of the Daleks. The economy of the planet is said to be in a terrible state.[8]


  • Alpha Canis One, also called Canis Major, is the home planet of the Canisians, a war-mongering race encountered in Death Comes to Time.[9]


  • Althrace is the name of both a star system and its primary planet, visited by the Fifth Doctor in the Doctor Who Monthly comic strip, "The Tides of Time". The planets of the system were bolted together around a white hole. The system was home to a race of Higher Evolutionaries, and to the demon Melanicus.[10]


  • Alvega is the closest planet to Skaro, inhabited by the vegetable race the Amaryll. When the Daleks invaded the planet, they were defeated by the Amaryll Controller who controlled all Amaryll on the planet in the TV Century 21 comic The Amaryll Challenge.[11]


  • Alzarius is Adric's homeworld, located in E-Space. It appeared in the serial Full Circle. Its galactic coordinates are identical to those of Gallifrey—except they were negative.[12] Alzarius is covered in lush, dense forests and marshlands. Every 50 years, the planet is dragged further away from its sun by a larger planet, causing a phenomenon known as "Mistfall".[13][14]


  • Anagonia is a planet mentioned in the Seventh Doctor story The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Anathema is the homeworld of the Eighth Doctor's companion Compassion.[citation needed]


  • Andromeda, not to be confused with the constellation or galaxy, is the lush, green world seen in the Fifth Doctor serial Castrovalva. It is the location of the town of Castrovalva.[16]


  • Androzani Major and Androzani Minor are a pair of planets that form the setting of the serial The Caves of Androzani. Androzani Minor features a network of caves, inhabited by spectrox-producing giant bats. When the planet moved closer to Androzani Major, mud burst from Androzani Minor's core. The planets are located in the Sirius system. Both planets were once covered by water but have become hot and arid desert planets. Native life on Androzani Minor includes the Magma Beast, which lives in Androzani Minor's bubbling mud pools.[17][18] Androzani Major was also named as the place which the Harvest Rangers were from in the 2011 Christmas special, "The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe".[19][20]


  • Aneth, home of the Anethans, was forced to pay tribute to the planet Skonnos in the Fourth Doctor story The Horns of Nimon.[21]


  • Anima Persis is a geo-psychic world, inhabited by the psychic ghosts of its long-dead inhabitants; it was visited by the Doctor in Death Comes to Time. The planet is completely sterile and barren due to wars on the planet long ago.[9]


  • Anura is a planet almost entirely covered in water, home to an amphibian race.[22]


  • Apalapucia[23] is a paradise planet visited by the Eleventh Doctor, Amy Pond and Rory Williams in "The Girl Who Waited". According to the Doctor, the planet was voted Number 2 in the Top Ten Destinations for the Discerning Intergalactic Traveller, and boasts soaring spires, silver colonnades and the mirrored Glasmir mountains. The planet had a pinkish-purple sky and an oxygen-rich atmosphere. Upon arrival, however, the travellers find the planet quarantined, following an outbreak of the contagious alien disease Chen7.[23][24]


  • Aractus is a planet mentioned in Wooden Heart.[25]


  • Arcadia is a planet colonised by humans in the 25th century, and the setting of the Virgin New Adventures novel Deceit.[26] In the Torchwood episode "Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang", part of the plot revolves around Captain Jack Harkness's former partner Captain John Hart's search for an Arcadian diamond.[27] The Mayflower, a colony ship seen in the Doctor Who Monthly comic strip "Profits of Doom", was headed to settle Arcadia.[28] In "Vincent and the Doctor", Amy Pond mentions that the Doctor had taken her to visit Arcadia.[29] It is not confirmed whether these instances all refer to the same planet. None of these, however, are the location of the Fall of Arcadia from the Time War, which refers to a city on the planet Gallifrey.[30][31][32][33]


  • Arcateen V is a planet mentioned in The Sarah Jane Adventures story "Invasion of the Bane".[34] It is the home planet of the Butterfly People,[35] which include a "star poet" associate of Sarah Jane Smith,[34] and a criminal called Mary in the Torchwood episode "Greeks Bearing Gifts".[36]


  • Archetryx is the home planet of a time-active race, visited in the audio drama The Apocalypse Element,[37] and mentioned in other Doctor Who audio dramas.[vague][citation needed]


  • Arcopolis is the setting for The Eyeless.


  • Arden, the home of the Shenn, is the setting for the Virgin Missing Adventures book Shadowmind.[38]


  • Argolis is the setting of the serial The Leisure Hive. Argolis is the first of the Argolin leisure planets. Argolis became radioactive after the Argolins' 20-minute war with the Foamasi. The surviving Argolins then built a Leisure Hive, and abandoned their war-like culture to promote peace and understanding between alien races.[1][39]


  • Aridius was once an aquatic planet in a binary star system, covered by the Sagarro Sea. Amphibious Aridians dwelt in a city beneath the ocean which came under attack from flesh-eating octopoids called Mire Beasts, which dwelt in the slime of the seabed. But over a thousand years the planet's twin suns moved closer and closer, burning up the sea and creating the Sagarro desert. It is the setting for the beginning of The Chase.[40][41]


  • Arkannis Major is a planet visited by the Doctor, Rose and Jack in The Stealers of Dreams where fiction is banned. It is also known as Colony World 4378976.Delta Four, Oneiros, Journey's End and Discovery.[42]


  • Arkheon, also known as the Planet of Ghosts, is a planet located near the Crab Nebula, just past the Pleiades, left at the Blue Star Worlds. Temporal echoes resembling ghosts roamed the surface due to a temporal fissure in the planet's core. The world was virtually destroyed by the Daleks, but the remains were visited in Prisoner of the Daleks.[43]


  • Artaris is a planet visited in the Excelis Trilogy of audio plays, beginning with Excelis Dawns. Excelis was a major city-state on the planet. Bernice Summerfield and Iris Wildthyme also visited the planet.[44][45][46][47]


  • Asgard is a planet on which the Doctor and River Song went picnicking. It was mentioned in "Silence in the Library".[48]


  • Astra is a planet mentioned in The Rescue. The crew of Vicki's space ship were travelling from Earth to Astra when they crashed on Dido.[49]

  • The Asylum is the planet where the Eleventh Doctor, Amy and Rory are sent by the Daleks in the episode "Asylum of the Daleks". It was where the Daleks imprisoned insane members of their race. It was infected with nanogenes which transformed anyone, living or dead, into a zombie-like Dalek 'puppet' to serve as part of the planet's security system. It was destroyed by the Dalek Empire at the end of the episode.[50][51]


  • Atrios is a planet at war with Zeos in The Armageddon Factor.[52][53]


  • Augea is a planet mentioned in Sting of the Zygons. The planet mirrors Greek mythology and the Twelve Labours of Hercules.[54]


  • Auros is a planet colonised by humans in the Earth Empire, with a temperate climate and a single small moon. It was destroyed in the novel Prisoner of the Daleks.[43]


  • Avalon is a planet with six moons. Once home to an advanced race, it was colonised by humans, setting up a nation named Elbyon. The Doctor visited Avalon circa 3025 in the novel The Sorcerer's Apprentice.[55]


  • Axista Four is the planet on which the Independent Earth Colony was founded by Stewart Ransom in 2439. The Second Doctor, Jamie McCrimmon, and Zoe Heriot visited this colony in 2539 in the Past Doctor Adventures book, The Colony of Lies.[56]


  • Azure is a blue planet seen from the ships in the Fourth Doctor story Nightmare of Eden. Its implied location is West Galaxy and the Empress spaceship had a seasonal charter to ferry passengers between the planet and Station 9. The peoples of Azure enact the death penalty for drug trafficking[57]



B




  • Bandraginus 5 was a planet rich in the rare mineral Oolion until it was destroyed by Zanak in The Pirate Planet. It had over a thousand million inhabitants.[58]


  • Bandril is the planet of the Bandrils, the enemies of the Karfelons in the Sixth Doctor story Timelash.[59][60]


  • Barcelona is a planet where dogs have no noses, mentioned in "The Parting of the Ways" [61] and the 2005 Children in Need special.[62] In the Ninth Doctor's opinion, it is a "fantastic place".[61]


  • Baydafarn is a planet mentioned in the Ninth Doctor novel Only Human. There was an infinite recession on this planet, leading to the ban of the psychic credit card.[63]


  • Belannia II is another planet mentioned in the Eighth Doctor Adventures.[vague][citation needed]


  • Belannia IV is a planet the Eighth Doctor and Sam visited in Beltempest.[64]


  • Belepheron is a planet mentioned in the Tenth Doctor New Series Adventures novel The Last Dodo.[65]


  • Bellaphores is a planet mentioned in The Two Doctors.[66]


  • Bessan is a planet, mentioned as one of many which were conquered by the Krillitanes in "School Reunion".[67]


  • Beta Two is a planet mentioned in State of Decay which was discovered to be located in the Perugellis System.[68]


  • Betelgeuse is mentioned in Destiny of the Daleks as coming a close second to Arcturus in the Galactic Olympic Games.[8] Professor Chronotis also owned a book entitled 'Alternative Betelgeuse' in the untelevised story Shada.


  • Betrushia features in the Virgin New Adventures novel St Anthony's Fire.[69]


  • Biblios is also known as the library planet. All the data in the known universe is stored here, even about the Doctor himself and about his adventures. The Fourth Doctor and K9 Mark II visited this planet in the comic strip "War of the Words".[70]


  • Blenhorm Ogin is a planet mentioned briefly in the novel Prisoner of the Daleks.[43]


  • Blestinu was a world on which the Parakon Corporation caused a war to generate dead bodies to fertilise rapine. Blestinuians were a reptilian race.[citation needed]


  • Blini-Gaar is a planet visited by the Seventh Doctor in the novel Prime Time. It is an agricultural world with an all-encompassing televisual culture. It has a single moon, Blinni-Orkos.[71]


  • Bliss is a planet that has been subject to experiments. It was visited by the Seventh Doctor, Ace and Hex in Enemy of the Daleks.[72]


  • Bonarcha Anarda is a planet mentioned in The Power of Kroll, where there are methane-catalysing refineries in every town.[73]


  • Boromeo is a planet mentioned in the Seventh Doctor adventure The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Bortresoye is the home planet of the Eighth Doctor's companion C'rizz. This planet appeared in the Big Finish Productions adventure The Creed of the Kromon.[74]


  • Bruydac is the home planet of the Bruydac, an alien race featured in the Torchwood original novel Another Life.[75]


  • Brus is a planet which had a section of its terrain captured by the Continuous Event Transmuter in Nightmare of Eden. It is seen in the first image shown on the CET machine and has a light blue atmosphere which supports vegetation. The ground is covered by a rolling white mist and tannish-yellow mountains can be seen in the distance.[57]


  • Bouken is a barren, desert planet rich in oil and covered by tannish-yellow sand first mentioned in the second episode of The Infinite Quest and the prime setting of the third, fourth and fifth episodes. It is in orbit around three artificial suns. It is the location of the first data chip that will lead to the Infinite.[22]



C




  • Calliopticon is the home planet to the dwarf people race, the Meticons. It was mentioned in The Dalek Pocketbook and Space Travellers Guide.[76]


  • Calufrax is a dead, icy planet about fourteen thousand kilometres across which was in actuality a disguised segment of The Key to Time. The planet was subsequently shrunk and stolen by the Pirate Captain in The Pirate Planet.[58]


  • Calufrax Minor is mentioned in "The Stolen Earth" as one of the 27 planets taken by Davros.[3] The comic series The Forgotten specifies that is not the same planet as Calufrax. It is home to an insect-like species of parasites.[77]


  • Carsus is a planet which the Sixth Doctor and Mel visited in the Past Doctor Adventures book, Spiral Scratch. The Library of Carsus, the largest knowledge repository in the universes, is located on this planet. It is located in the same stellar system as Lakertya.[78]


  • Cashel is a planet mentioned by the Tenth Doctor in the story "The Bog Warrior". It is a completely average planet populated by humans and consists of two kingdoms: Tollund and Lindow.[79]


  • Cassius is a yet undiscovered outer planet of our solar system, located beyond Pluto, as mentioned by K9 in The Sun Makers[80][81]


  • Castor 36 is a planet promised to Luke Rattigan by the Sontarans in "The Poison Sky".[82]


  • Catastrophea features in the Past Doctor Adventures novel of that name.[83]


  • Catrigan Nova is a planet to which the Master promises to take his masseuse Tanya in "Last of the Time Lords". It has whirlpools of gold.[84]


  • Centauri Seven is a planet mentioned in Time and the Rani.[85]


  • Cep Cassalon, a group of integrated planets, are mentioned in the book Monsters and Villains, and are referenced as a place in the year five billion where the Face of Boe is known as 'the Creature that God Forgot'.[86]


  • Chavic Five is a planet mentioned in "The Long Game", the government of which has collapsed by the year 200,000, reducing the emigration of its inhabitants.[87]


  • Cheem is the home planet of the Forest of Cheem, highly evolved trees who sent delegates to witness the death of the Earth.[citation needed]


  • Cheetah Planet is the unnamed homeworld of the Cheetah People in the Seventh Doctor serial Survival. It is a beautiful world, with sand dunes and forests near a great lake. It is also a deadly world which the natives share a symbiotic relationship with.[88][89]


  • Chelonia is the home of the Chelonians, tortoise-like aliens introduced in the Virgin New Adventures novel The Highest Science.[90]


  • Chimeria is a lush, green planet mentioned in Delta and the Bannermen. It is known as "The Garden Planet".[91]


  • Chimera IV is a forest planet that holds sanctuary for the kind Chimerans, descended from the Chimeras that left ancient Greece.[citation needed]


  • Chloris is the setting of the Fourth Doctor serial The Creature from the Pit. In The Creature from the Pit, Chloris is discovered to be a lush, green jungle planet high in vegetable matter but low in minerals.[92][93] Through extensive research,[by whom?][original research?] the planet is discovered to have two suns.


  • Chronos is the setting for the webcast Real Time. The planet was conquered by the Cybermen.[94]


  • Cinethon is a planet mentioned in the Seventh Doctor story The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Clom is the home planet of the Abzorbaloff mentioned by the creature in the 2006 series episode "Love & Monsters", as being the twin planet of Raxacoricofallapatorius.[95] In "The Stolen Earth", Clom is one of the 27 planets that have been taken out of time and space by Davros and the Daleks. In hearing that the Daleks have taken Clom the Tenth Doctor remarks, "Clom's gone? Who'd want Clom?" [3] In Revenge of the Slitheen, one of the Slitheen characters is heard to say "For the love of Clom!" in frustration.[96] There is a Disneyland on Clom (mentioned in "The Girl Who Waited").[24]


  • Clix is a planet mentioned in the Sarah Jane Adventures episodes Revenge of the Slitheen and The Gift as being one of four planets in the "Raxas Alliance", alongside Raxacoricofallapatorius, Raxacoricovarlonpatorius and Clom.[97]


  • Colano Alpha and Colano Beta are both mentioned in the story The Robots of Death. They are believed to be covered by thick sand.[98]


  • Collabria is a planet mentioned in the fifth series The Sarah Jane Adventures story Sky. The planet is red in color and features a stunning set of fiery rings.[99]


  • Collactin is a planet mentioned in The Pirate Planet. It was destroyed by the planet Zanak for its minerals.[58]

  • The Colony planet was an otherwise unnamed world that was home to a human colony, which had been infiltrated by Macra. It may lie within Galaxy M87, although this is uncertain.[original research?][citation needed]


  • Cotter Palluni's World (a.k.a. Cotta Pallunie’s World) is a planet where the skies are constantly bombarded by electricity or lightning storms, mentioned in the episode "The Sontaran Stratagem".[100]


  • Crafe Tec Heydra is a planet mentioned in the Doctor Who Annual.[vague] On the side of one of its mountains, there are carvings of the Time War with the words 'You are not alone' scratched underneath the hieroglyphs and symbols.[citation needed]


  • Crinoth is a planet visited in The Horns of Nimon.[21][101]



D




  • D5–Gamma–Z–Alpha is the Movellan name for Skaro.[102]


  • Dæmos a.k.a. Demos is the home planet of the Dæmons in the story The Dæmons.[103] It is also mentioned in "The Satan Pit" as one of many planets with legends of a horned "beast".[104] Vorg and Shirna mention visiting a planet called Demos in episode two of Carnival of Monsters,[105] but it is unclear whether this is the same planet.


  • Dakito is a planet controlled by the Shadow King.[citation needed]


  • Darbodia is a planet visited by the Doctor and his grandchildren, John and Gillian, in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "The Land of Happy Endings".[106]


  • Darkheart is a planet located in the gap between the Galaxy's spiral arms, connected to its star's mass via a dimensional bridge. It was the location of the Darkheart device, a machine that could destroy planets and alter morphic fields.[107]


  • Darp is a planet mentioned in Nightmare of Eden.[57]


  • Darillium (a.k.a. Durillium) is the location of the Singing Towers. The Doctor took Professor River Song (in his future and her past) to see these towers just before she had to go to the Library. It was mentioned in "Forest of the Dead" and later appeared in "The Husbands of River Song".[108]


  • Delphon is a planet where the natives communicate with their eyebrows, first mentioned in Spearhead from Space.[109] The language is "spoken" in the Big Finish Productions audio play ...ish.[110]


  • Desperus is the penal planet of the solar system in the 41st century, seen in The Daleks' Master Plan. The native creatures of Desperus are the screamers.[111][112]


  • Deva Loka - known as Planet S14 - it is home to the Kinda people in the Fifth Doctor serial Kinda. It was once part of the Manussan Empire. There are no predatory animals on Deva Loka, no diseases or adverse environmental factors. The climate is constant within a five degree range and the trees fruit in sequence all the year round[113][114]


  • Dhakan is a planet visited in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "The Glorious Dead". Dhakan was ruled by Cardinal Morningstar, head of the Church of the Glorious Dead. It was in fact Earth, whose history had been perverted by the Master.[115]


  • Diadem is the most relaxing planet in the Galaxy. It was seen in The Crystal Bucephalus.[116]


  • Dido is the setting of The Rescue. It is a mountainous desert world home to vicious-looking but harmless sand beasts, and to a mysterious humanoid race. The Doctor describes the natives as a people to whom violence is totally alien.[49][117]


  • Dioscuros is a planet on which Captain Cook once saw a shrine, as mentioned in the Seventh Doctor story The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Diplos is a G-Class planet in Tau Ceti. It was the home of Cessair, the Doctor's adversary in The Stones of Blood who had stolen the great Seal of Diplos, which possessed the powers of transmutation, transformation and the establishing of hyperspatial and temporal coordinates.[118]


  • Discurus is another planet that was destroyed by planet Zanak. It was mentioned in The Pirate Planet.[58]


  • Draconia is the homeworld of the Draconians and features in the serial Frontier in Space. Draconia and Earth become the dominant space-faring species at some point in the future, leading to conflict.[119][120] It is also mentioned in "The Satan Pit" as one of many planets with legends of a horned "beast".[104]


  • Drahva is the home planet of the Drahvins, a female warrior race encountered by the First Doctor in Galaxy 4.[121]


  • Dravidia is a planet in the Rexel Planetary Configuration, mentioned during the sole performance of William Shakespeare's lost play Love's Labours Won in "The Shakespeare Code".[122] A Dravidian ship crash-landed on Karn in The Brain of Morbius.[123] The Dravidians are featured in the Doctor Who book The Planet of Oblivion, part of The Darksmith Legacy.[124]


  • Dronid is a planet mentioned in the unfinished serial Shada.[125]


  • Duchamp 331 is a planet used as a refuelling station for ships. It also has a gallery and a few businesses. It rains dust every day and every night there is a loud, Dalek-like scream that can be heard throughout the planet. According to legend, the origin of the screaming is that a long time ago, a Dalek saucer came down to land but the dust dragged it down and destroyed it. The Seventh Doctor and Ace visited the planet in Dust Breeding.[126]


  • Dulkis is the planet on which the Second Doctor encounters the Dominators in The Dominators.[127][128]


  • Dust, later Foreman's World, is a former Earth colony on the Dead Frontier at the edge of the Galaxy. Vigilante gangs called Clansmen are active there. It is later renamed Foreman's World after the thirteenth incarnation of travelling Time Lord I.M. Foreman merges with its biosphere. It appeared in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel Interference: Book Two.[129]



E



  • Earth, is the home planet of humans[130] and a frequent target for alien invasions. Other sentient species with terrestrial origins include Silurians and Sea Devils, "fairies" [131] and, in an alternate future, Haemovores.[additional citation(s) needed] Earth is first seen in An Unearthly Child and many times thereafter.[132][133][134][135]




  • Eden is a dark, hostile jungle world seen in Nightmare of Eden. It is the native planet of the Mandrels. It has an orange atmosphere and is constantly bathed in orange twilight. Native plant life includes meat-eating plants, which are also seen in Nightmare of Eden, when one attacks the Doctor.[57][136]


  • Ephte Major is the home planet of the avaricious, slug-like Ephtes, seen in the Doctor Who Monthly comic strip "Profits of Doom".[28]


  • Enlandia is a planet mentioned in The Ark in Space. It is a planet entirely covered by water.[137]


  • Epsilon Four Zero Gamma (a.k.a. Epsilon Four) is a planet mentioned in the story The Dominators.[127]


  • Esto is a planet visited by the First Doctor and Susan Foreman before the start of the TV series. It is home to telepathic plants. It was mentioned in the story The Sensorites.[138]


  • Eudamus is another planet mentioned in the Seventh Doctor story The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Exarius is a planet visited in the story Colony in Space, also spelled Uxarieus.[139][140][141]


  • Exxilon is the planet on which the Third Doctor encounters the Daleks in Death to the Daleks. According to the Doctor, the Great City of the Exxilons is one of the 700 Wonders of the Universe (after its destruction, he sadly says that the universe has now been reduced to 699 wonders).[142][143] It is also the origin of a spaceship that crashed in Mexico in the Virgin New Adventures novel The Left-Handed Hummingbird.[144]

  • The Eye of Orion is the wet, tranquil planet visited by the Fifth Doctor at the beginning of The Five Doctors. It is a planet constantly bombarded by positive ions and is believed (at least by the Doctor) to be one of the most beautiful and peaceful planets in the cosmos.[145][146] Ruins on the planet suggest that it once had a civilisation.[146] According to Martha Jones' blog after the last Time War, a shrine was built on this planet in memorial to that war.[citation needed]



F




  • Fagiros is another planet mentioned in the Seventh Doctor story The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Felspoon is a planet mentioned by Donna in "Journey's End". The planet has mountains that sway in the breeze.[4]


  • Fifteenth Broken Moon is located in the legendary Medusa Cascade. It apparently is broken in large pieces and is mentioned by the Tenth Doctor in the episode The Sontaran Stratagem


  • The Fifth Planet in our solar system was destroyed by the Time Lords in an attempt to destroy the Fendahl, the planet's remains create the asteroid field that lies between Mars and Jupiter.[citation needed]


  • Fisar is a planet mentioned by Mavic Chen in The Daleks' Master Plan.[111]


  • Florana is one of the universe's most beautiful planets, mentioned at the end of Invasion of the Dinosaurs. It is said by the Doctor that its land is carpeted by perfumed flowers, seas of warm milk and sand as soft as swan's down.[147] It is also described as having oceans of effervescent water (where the bubbles support you) in Death to the Daleks.[142]


  • Foreman's World is another name for Dust.[129]


  • Freytus is a planet mentioned in The Ribos Operation.[148]


  • Frontios is a colony planet in the Veruna system in the serial of the same name. Frontios is a desert planet and is often bombarded by sandstorms and gale-force winds.[149][150]



G




  • Galaxis Bright and Galaxis Dark are sister planets mentioned in the novella Nightdreamers. Dark was economically superior to Bright. The moon Verd orbited Bright.[151]


  • Gallifrey is the home planet of the Time Lords.[152][153] It was first seen (but not named) in The War Games[154] and first named (but not seen) in The Time Warrior.[155] It was thought to be destroyed in a Time War, wiping out nearly all of the Time Lord race.[156][157] It was in fact saved by all of thirteen incarnations of the Doctor in the fiftieth anniversary special, "The Day of the Doctor" and trapped in stasis in a pocket universe.[32][33] It has burnt-orange skies and snow-covered mountains, silver-leafed trees and red grass. Gallifrey's system has two suns.[158][159] The Time Lord council attempted to restore the planet beyond the Time War from within the time lock, using the Master and a white point star to form a physical connection beyond the time lock, but the Tenth Doctor destroyed the link.[33][160]


  • Galsec Seven is a planet mentioned in The Sontaran Experiment. It is where a human colony is located.[161]


  • Gameworld Gamma is a lush, green world owned by Mr and Mrs Pakoo, as seen in the Doctor Who Adventures.[vague] It is used to hunt humans in the year five billion.[citation needed]


  • Gauda Prime is a human colony planet in the Earth Empire and a "tough" place to live. It was mentioned in Prisoner of the Daleks.[43]


  • Gearon is a planet mentioned in "Mission to the Unknown". This is also the name of one of the delegates in the Galactic Council.[162]


  • Gidu is a stormy planet mentioned in Nightmare of Eden. Gidu has a light pinkish-yellow atmosphere and has a wide variety of vegetation. Its surface is often bombarded by gale-force winds.[57]


  • Glasson Minor is a planet mentioned in The Creature from the Pit.[92]


  • Gliese 581d A known exoplanet that was the setting of the episode Smile.[163] The planet was the site of one of humanity's earliest colonies following the evacuation of the Earth.


  • Golobus is another planet mentioned in the Seventh Doctor story The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]

  • The Gond Homeworld is the unnamed planet of the humanoid Gonds, who were in the thrall of the Krotons.[164][165]


  • Grajick Major is one of the planets Rose and the Doctor visited mentioned in Justin Richards' Ultimate Monster Guide.[166]


  • Granados is another planet that was destroyed by Zanak in The Pirate Planet.[58]


  • Grått is a world visited in the comic book "The Whispering Gallery". Emotion is outlawed amongst the humanoid inhabitants of this rainy world, described as a dwarf planet.[167]


  • Griffoth is the home planet of the Graske, and is seen in the interactive episode "Attack of the Graske".[168]


  • Griophos is a planet mentioned in Paradise Towers.[169]

  • The Grold Homeworld is a small, hot planet with a rarefied atmosphere. It is tidally locked, therefore lacking a day-night cycle. The Grold were flurosilicon-based, and appeared in The Eye of the Giant.[170]


  • Grolon is yet another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Grundle is a planet mentioned in Carnival of Monsters. A swampy satellite of this planet is home to the vicious Drashigs.[171]



H




  • Hakol (a.k.a. Harkol) is a planet mentioned in the Fifth Doctor serial The Awakening. A probe from this planet features in The Awakening. The people of Harkol can harness psychic energy, and use tinclavic metal acquired from Raaga.[172]


  • Halcya is a tranquil planet briefly visited in the comic strip "The Gift".[173]


  • Halergan Three (a.k.a. Harlequin Three) is a holiday planet mentioned in The Ribos Operation.[148]


  • Hastus Minor is a planet mentioned in The Monsters Inside. Ermenshrew Blathereen is revealed to have led a talent agency on this planet.[174]


  • Heaven is the setting of the Virgin New Adventures novel Love and War by Paul Cornell. It lies between human space and the Draconian Empire, but despite being beautiful and peaceful, has no tactical value or mineral wealth. It was a jointly administered burial ground for humans and Draconians, but became part of a plot by the Hoothi.[175]


  • Hedron is a planet where the advanced inhabitants conducted disastrous experiments with time, as seen in the Doctor Who Monthly comic strip "Time Bomb".[176]


  • Heiradi is a planet mentioned in Frontios.[149]


  • Hell is the homeworld of the Helkans, who were enslaved by the Daleks to mine pockets of the highly toxic helkogen gas beneath the planet's surface in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip story Nemesis of the Daleks.[177] It also appeared in Emperor of the Daleks! [178]


  • Hermethica is the homeworld of the Wire as mentioned in the book Creatures and Demons. The Hermethicans are not naturally formless, but the Wire's group found a way to transform themselves into plasmic energy and used their abilities to attempt takeover of the planet.[179]

  • The unnamed planet on which Hokesh was located orbited an old star near the centre of the Galaxy, suffering from temporal disturbances. Hokesh was a city, and a life form, visited in the novella Citadel of Dreams.[180]


  • House is a malevolent, sentient planetoid, located in a tiny bubble universe. House gorged itself on artron energy, and used Gallifreyan distress signals left by Time Lords that crashed on its surface to entrap other Time Lords and their TARDISes in order to feed on them. Such as a distress signal attracted the attention of the Eleventh Doctor in "The Doctor's Wife".[181][182]


  • Hurala is a planetoid that hosted a Lodestar station, a stopping off point for travellers to more distant planets. It was located in the Lasron Solar Region. It had long been abandoned by the time the Doctor arrived there in the novel Prisoner of the Daleks.[43]


  • Hyspero is a planet visited by the Eighth Doctor in the novel The Scarlet Empress. Its capital city, by the same name, has huge markets. Hyspero has a 21-hour day cycle, a mythological quality to life and its literature celebrates thieves and assassins.[183]



I




  • Indigo 3 is the location of the Blue Desert in the audio drama The Skull of Sobek. The desert is perfectly symmetrical, but in the centre is the Sanctuary of Imperfect Symmetry, a religious retreat which exists to counterbalance the desert's perfection.[184]


  • Inter Minor and Inter Major features in the Third Doctor serial Carnival of Monsters as the location of the Miniscope.[171][185]


  • Iphitus is yet another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]



J




  • Jaconda is the planet on which the Sixth Doctor serial The Twin Dilemma is set. It was once a lush, green world with lush meadows and wooded countryside. It was also once well known for its friendly natives. However, in present times, it has become an almost dead, barren and arid planet, with little vegetation. It also smells of rotting vegetables. On some parts of the planet, forests of dead trees can be seen for miles.[186][187]


  • Jahoo is one of the twenty-seven planets taken by Davros in "The Stolen Earth".[3]


  • Jalian 17 is a planet mentioned in Prisoner of the Daleks. The Doctor describes it as "all right for a party." [43]


  • Jan Francis IX is the planet visited by the Doctor, Romana, Tavius and Janet sometime in The New Adventures of Doctor Who history.[vague][citation needed]


  • Junk is one of the planets featured in the New Series Adventures novel Shining Darkness. The whole planet is a scrapyard and is located in the Andromeda Galaxy.[188]


  • Jupiter is the sixth planet from Earth's sun. The fifth planet was destroyed by the Time Lords, and its remains create the asteroid field that lies between Mars and Jupiter.[citation needed] A gas giant, Jupiter has immense gravity. An orbiting space station is the setting for the novel Fear Itself.[189] The planet has many moons including, in the future, Voga.[190]


  • Justicia is a system of prison planets featured in the New Series Adventures novel The Monsters Inside by Stephen Cole. The Justicia system has lots of planets, six of which are named after letters in the Greek alphabet: Justice Alpha, Justice Beta, Justice Gamma, Justice Delta and Justice Epsilon. There is also another planet called Justice Prime.[174]Rose Tyler mentions her visit to Justicia in the episode "Boom Town", the first explicit reference to a plot point from the novels in the television programme.[191]



K





  • Kahler is a planet mentioned in the Doctor Who episode "A Town Called Mercy". It was said to have been the site of a devastating war. Native planet of the humanoid race known as the Kahler, who are said to be great builders.[192]


  • Kalakiki is another planet from The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Kalaya is the homeworld of the Kalarians, foes of the Selachians.[citation needed]


  • Kaldor is a planet featured in The Robots of Death.[98]


  • Kantra is a warm, tropical world mentioned in Destiny of the Daleks. It is the native planet of the Kantrians.[8]


  • Kanval is a planet mentioned in Mindwarp.[193]


  • Kapteyn 5 is a planet mentioned in the Virgin New Adventures, which is home to more than sixty sentient species including butterfly-people[194] and avian messengers.[195] It was conquered by the Caxtarids, who wiped out four of the sentient species, made deals with four, and enslaved the rest.[citation needed]


  • Karas don Kazra don Slava is a planet with intelligent sand and singing fish.[citation needed]


  • Kar-Charrat is a planet close to the edge of the Galaxy, home to a race composed of water. It is the location of a vast library complex, visited in the audio The Genocide Machine.[196]


  • Karfel is the setting of the serial Timelash. It is a barren, rocky, grey planet that orbits two suns known as Rearbus and Selynx. Its natives have an uneasy relationship with the neighbouring planet of Bandril.[59][60]


  • Karn is home to the Sisterhood of Karn in The Brain of Morbius. It is an almost barren world with a mountainous terrain that is often bombarded by fierce lightning storms, as seen in The Brain of Morbius.[123][197] The Eighth Doctor died in a crash here in "The Night of the Doctor", only to be revived and regenerated by the Sisterhood into the War Doctor.[198][199] The Twelfth Doctor later visited Karn to deliver his confession dial to Sister Ohila so that she could deliver the disc to the Master; the Doctor was soon after tracked to the planet by an agent of Davros.


  • Karris is one of the planets featured in the New Series Adventures novel Shining Darkness.[188]


  • Kas is one of the ten planets that had its entire population stolen – bar one person – in IDW's Doctor Who comic series.[vague][citation needed]


  • Kastopheria AKA Catastrophea is a planet positioned between the United Planets Association and the Draconian Empire. It is home an advanced race of giant humanoids named the People.[83]


  • Kastria is the home planet of Eldrad, and features in The Hand of Fear. Once a lush planet, it has an icy, rocky and barren surface that is constantly bombarded by solar winds and suffers from frigid temperatures as seen in The Hand of Fear.[200][201]


  • Kataa Floko is a planet mentioned in the episode "The Sontaran Stratagem". It is said to have diamond coral reefs[100] and is presumed[by whom?][original research?] to be a tropical/paradise world.


  • Katakiki is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Katuria is a planet named in the New Series Adventures novel The Clockwise Man. It was ruled by a tyrannical dictator by the name of Shade Vassily until he was overthrown by a group of revolutionists and was sentenced to exile on Earth.[202]


  • Kegron Pluva is a planet with the "maddest ecosystem in the universe", mentioned in the New Series Adventures novel Only Human.[63]


  • Kembel is the setting of "Mission to the Unknown" and much of The Daleks' Master Plan. It is mostly covered in large, inhospitable[to whom?] jungles home to many strange creatures. It is described as the most hostile planet known, and only the Dalek forces were willing to use it as a base. However, when the Time Destructor is activated there by the First Doctor, the planet is reduced to a desert.[111][162][203]


  • Kinjana is a planet mentioned in the Tenth Doctor New Series Adventures novel The Last Dodo.[65]


  • Kirith is the planet of the Kirithons and setting of the Virgin New Adventures story Timewyrm: Apocalypse.[204]


  • Klechton is a planet described as being "pretty dull" by the Doctor in Prisoner of the Daleks.[43]


  • Kolkokron (a.k.a. Culkacron) is a planet mentioned in Frontios. It is a rocky, barren planet covered by boulders, boulders and more boulders.[149]


  • Koorharn is a planet mentioned in the episode "42". The Tenth Doctor takes Martha Jones there to ice skate on its mineral lakes.[205]


  • Kosnax is a planet mentioned in Time-Flight.[206]


  • Karass Don Slava is a planet mentioned in the episode "Amy's Choice". It is home to the Candle Meadows and is the origin of Psychic Pollen.[207]


  • Kreme is a planet mentioned in The Space Museum.[208]


  • Krillia is the home planet of the Krillitanes.[citation needed]


  • Krontep is a planet mentioned in Mindwarp.[193]


  • Krop Tor is a planet impossibly in orbit around a black hole designated K37 Gem5,[209][210] and the setting of "The Impossible Planet"[209] and "The Satan Pit".[104] Its name translates to "The Bitter Pill" in Falltino, the legend being that the black hole was a demon who was tricked into swallowing the planet only to spit it out after discovering that it was poison.[209][210] It was destroyed when it fell into the black hole.[104][210]


  • Kylos is another planet mentioned in The Space Museum.[208]


  • Kyrol is a watery planet that was home to a human expedition, a humanised Dalek colony, and a native beast named Kataphobus. Visited in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "Children of the Revolution".[211]



L




  • Lakertya is the setting of the serial Time and the Rani. It is a peaceful and primitive planet. Most of the planet is rocky and mountainous, with little vegetation. It is covered by lakes.[85][212]


  • Laylora is the setting of the New Series Adventures novel The Price of Paradise. It is often referred to as the Paradise Planet.[213]


  • Leela's homeworld was visited in The Face of Evil. It is a planet covered by dense forests and has a pinkish atmosphere. It also has mountains.[214][215]


  • Lelex is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Leophantos aka. Leovontos is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Levithia is a planet mentioned in The Ribos Operation.[148][216]


  • The Library is a planet containing every book from throughout time. The planet was abandoned when it was invaded by a deadly swarm of Vashta Nerada which devoured all the visitors and staff. The Tenth Doctor and Donna travel to the planet in "Silence in the Library" after the Doctor receives an emergency call from the planet on his Psychic Paper. It is orbited by Doctor Moon, an artificial satellite (with a human-like AI) which maintains the computer systems on the planet through wireless connection.[48][217]


  • Limnos 4 is a leisure planet mentioned in The Leisure Hive, hosting non-gravity swimming pools, sleep-reading stations, accelerated learning and robotic gladiatorial games.[1]


  • Livonia is the main setting for the Second Doctor audio story Fear of the Daleks.[218]


  • Loam is the setting of the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip story The Woman Who Sold the World. It is a world undergoing a "planet clearance" by a race of giant robots known as the High Goliax.[219]


  • Lobos features in the Second Doctor serial The Space Pirates. It is a frontier world where the character Milo Clancey has his base.[220][221]


  • Logopolis is the setting of much of the action in the serial Logopolis. It is home to a race of mathematicians who are masters of Block Transfer Computation.[222][223]


  • Lonsis is a planet visited in Human Resources.[224]


  • Lowitelom aka. Lowiteliom is another planet that was destroyed by Zanak in The Pirate Planet. Its name is seen briefly in the Captain's Trophy Room.[58]


  • Lucifer is a gas giant planet featured in the Virgin New Adventures book Lucifer Rising with its two moons, Moloch and Belial. The planet held many mysteries for the Project Eden research team. The first being the construction of a bridge between the two moons and the chambers and technology built within the moons. The second being a new and unnamed super dense element that was detected at the core of the planet. The dominant species on the planet were named Angels by the Project Eden Team.[225] It is also mentioned in the Ninth Doctor episode "Bad Wolf".[226]


  • Lurma is a planet mentioned in Carnival of Monsters.[171]


  • Lvan (a.k.a. Luan) is another planet mentioned in Nightmare of Eden.[57]



M




  • Magellan is a planet visited by the Fifth Doctor in the Doctor Who Monthly/The Official Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "The Moderator".[227]


  • Magnus or Magnus Epsilon was an Earth colony visited in the unfilmed but novelised script Mission to Magnus. Females dominate the society.[228]


  • Malcassairo is a planet featured in the Tenth Doctor episode "Utopia". It is the home of Chantho's people, the Malmooth, in their city (conglomeration). By the end of the universe it is home to a human refugee camp/space program, and the hostile Futurekind with almost all of the Malmooth wiped out.[229][230]


  • Manussa is the setting of the Fifth Doctor serial Snakedance. The planet's surface is arid and sandy and is dotted by ragged rocks.[231][232]


  • Marinus is the setting of the First Doctor serial The Keys of Marinus. It was home to a human-like race, the disembodied brains of Morpho, and the Voord.[233][234] The Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "The World Shapers" suggests that Marinus is in fact Mondas.[235]


  • Marpesia is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Mars is the homeworld of the Ice Warriors and the Flood. The Tenth Doctor postulated that the Ice Warriors froze the Flood into a Glacier on the planet in a bitter war. Sometime in 2058, human explorers from Earth laid the foundations for their Bowie Base 1 colony upon this glacier in the hope that it would become the source of their water supplies, as seen in the 2009 episode "The Waters of Mars".[236][237] It is also the planet of origin of mysterious signals saying "Beware Sutekh" that were being beamed to Earth in Pyramids of Mars.[238] The Osirans left the GodEngine weapon there.[239] The Usurians engineered it to make it habitable by humans until the humans depleted its resources.[citation needed] In "The Long Game", a reference is also made to the University of Mars.[87] Aliens made contact with humans researching Mars in The Ambassadors of Death, but these beings were not native to the planet.[240][241]


  • Mechanus is a jungle-covered world inhabited by the Mechonoids, robots sent to prepare the planet for human colonisation. It is also the home of native fungoid life forms known as Gubbage Cones.[40][242]


  • Melagophon aka. Melogophon is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Melissa Majoria is the homeworld of most of the Earth's bees. It was mentioned in "The Stolen Earth".[3]


  • Mer is one of the ten planets that had its entire population stolen – bar one person – in IDW's Doctor Who comic series.[vague][citation needed]


  • Mesmerus is a planet inhabited by the Hypton race. It is mentioned in The Dalek Pocketbook and Space Travellers Guide.[76]


  • Messaline is a planet visited by the Doctor in "The Doctor's Daughter". The planet is in a state of constant war. Before it was terraformed at the end of "The Doctor's Daughter", the planet's surface was cold, windy and rocky, and covered in tar pits. According to Martha Jones, the atmosphere is 80% oxygen and 20% nitrogen. The planet also has three suns. It is the homeworld of the eponymous character, Jenny.[243][244]


  • Metallurgis 5 is a planet mentioned in the novel The Resurrection Casket.[245]


  • Meta Sigmafolio (a.k.a. Meta Sigma Polia) is a planet mentioned at the end of the episode "Last of the Time Lords". It is said to have a sky that looks like oil on water. It is also said to be the place where you can see a burst of starfire.[84]


  • Meta Vorka 6 is a planet mentioned in Part One of The Sarah Jane Adventures story The Last Sontaran where the Vorkasian horde travel in spacecraft about the size of a coffee cup.[246]


  • Metazula Beta is a planet mentioned in The Maltese Penguin as the location where Dogbolter's organisation manufactures plastic chairs.[247]


  • Metebelis Three aka the Blue Planet is where the Third Doctor takes a perfect blue crystal (a Metabelis Sapphire, which contains strange powers) from in The Green Death,[248][249] and where he returns to in the serial Planet of the Spiders.[249][250] It is also mentioned in Carnival of Monsters.[171] It is again mentioned in the 2013 episode "Hide", in which the Eleventh Doctor uses a blue crystal to amplify the natural clairvoyant abilities of a psychic in a device called a psychochronograph.[251] The planet has a blue sun,[249] has more than one moon, blue mountains,[additional citation(s) needed] the night-time sky is blue (and is light blue during the day)[249] and often snows at night.[additional citation(s) needed] Mist sometimes rolls over its surface.[citation needed] Native creatures include Metabelian Snakes (giant snakes), meat-eating tentacles and giant flying predators, which are seen briefly in The Green Death when the Doctor visits the planet.[248][249] It is called the Blue Planet because the moonlight is blue.[249] In his impersonation of Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor in Dead Ringers, Jon Culshaw makes frequent reference to this planet.[citation needed] According to Part Two of The Sarah Jane Adventures story The Lost Boy, the Metebelan Cosmic Cluster is home to 68,000 lifeforms.[252]


  • Metralubit is a remote human colony in the Fostrix galaxy in the 58th Segment of Time. The capital city is Metron. An intelligent gestalt of flies named Hive existed here, and could possess and animate dead bodies.[253]


  • Miasimia Goria is a planet ruled by the Rani.[254]


  • Midnight is a leisure planet visited by the Tenth Doctor and Donna in the episode of the same name. It has golden spas, anti-gravity restaurants, sapphire waterfalls, and a landscape of diamonds. The planet's sun emits x-tonic radiation, which vaporises organic matter and can only be viewed safely through sufficiently thick finito glass. The radiation poisons the diamonds, so the planet's surface can never be touched. However, there is some form of native life, which possesses a tourist named Sky Silvestry.[255][256]


  • Minyos is the original homeworld of the Minyans, and Minyos II is where they settle at the end of the serial Underworld.[257]


  • Mira is the planet of the invisible predatory Visians, visited in The Daleks' Master Plan. It is described as 'a strange planet in a strange galaxy.' What we see of the planet is mostly swamp-like.[111][258]


  • Mirabilis Major and Mirabilis Minor are both mentioned in The Ribos Operation.[148]

  • The Mobox homeworld was visited in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "Uroboros". The Mobox were intelligent, bulky creatures that could breathe fire.[259]


  • Mogar is a planet stripped bare of all its natural resources by humans. In Terror of the Vervoids, the Hyperion III spaceship sets off from Mogar with a cargo of deadly Vervoids created on the planet. Mogar is (or was) the source of many valuable and rare metals, including the mineral vionesium (a mineral similar to magnesium) that emits an intense light when exposed to oxygen. Mogar is an oxygen-free planet with a reddish surface.[260]


  • Mondaran is a planet now in ruins by the Cybermen. The Cybermen hold curfews with nightly patrols everyday on the planet making sure no one is on the streets.[citation needed]


  • Mondas is the home planet of the Cybermen, first seen in The Tenth Planet. An exact physical duplicate of the Earth, it drifted away to the 'edge of space' before returning to its destruction.[clarification needed][261] The Fifth Doctor visited it earlier in its history in the audio drama Spare Parts.[262]


  • Morestra is a planet mentioned in Planet of Evil. It is located in the Artoro Galaxy.[263]


  • Morok is the home of the Moroks, the rulers of Xeros in The Space Museum. At one point, Morok was the centre of a large interstellar empire.[208][264]

  • The Museum of the Last Ones is the setting of the Tenth Doctor New Series Adventures novel The Last Dodo. It is an entire planet dedicated to a museum displaying the last of every species from every planet in the universe.[65]


  • Muscolane is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Myarr is a planet first visited in the fifth episode of The Infinite Quest and the prime setting of the sixth and seventh. It is the location of the third data chip that will lead to the Infinite. The planet was claimed by both the Human Empire and the Mantasphid Hive.[22]



N




  • Navaros (or Navarro) is the planet of the Navarinos, tour-loving aliens from the Seventh Doctor serial Delta and the Bannermen.[91]


  • Necros[265] is a frozen planet used as a final resting place for the galaxy's dead. It features in the serial Revelation of the Daleks. It also has dark land masses and is almost constantly bombarded by turbulent weather.[265][266]


  • Nefrin is a planet in a distant galaxy. It is the home of Brimo, an immortal, from the Doctor Who Weekly comic strip "The Time Witch".[267]


  • Neogorgon is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • New Alexandria is the planet that hosted the restaurant The Crystal Bucephalus in the novel of the same name. It is heavily implied to be the ruins of Gallifrey.[116]


  • New Earth is a planet in the galaxy M87, first seen in the episode of the same name.[268][269] It is the new home of humanity five billion years in the future. New Earth is the same size as Earth and has the same atmosphere and orbit, though the continents and ecology are different. Visible in New Earth's sky are a large, pink body and a smaller, closer, white body, both exhibiting phases; the orbital relationship between New Earth and these two bodies is not described. The city of New New York (the 15th New York after the original) is located here.[268][269] In "Gridlock", much of the planet's population has died from a virus, save for those isolated in the underground motorway of New New York, which is also home to numerous devolved Macra.[158][269] New Earth is the home of the Testimony Foundation as depicted in "Twice Upon a Time".

  • Another planet named New Earth, unrelated to the above, was visited in the Doctor Who Weekly comic strip "The Dogs of Doom". The inhabitants were being transformed into Wereloks, in a scheme revealed to be masterminded by the Daleks.[270]


  • New Savannah is a planet in the Felinus system, in the Galaxy M57. It was the home planet of the Catkind. On the eve of the year 5 billion, it became part of the New Human Empire. Visited in IDW's Doctor Who comic series.[vague][citation needed]


  • New Venus is a planet mentioned in "The Long Game". In the year 200,000, sandstorms on this planet kill 200 sentients in the Archipelago.[87]


  • Nooma is a planet visited in the novel Speed of Flight. For 4000 years, a genetic experiment was conducted on the natives.[271]


  • Nyrruh 4 is one of the ten planets that had its entire population stolen – bar one person – in IDW's Doctor Who comic series.[vague][citation needed]



O




  • Oberon is a planet mentioned in Revelation of the Daleks.[266]


  • Oblivion is the homeworld of the Eighth Doctor's companion Destrii. The planet appeared in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip of the same name.[272]


  • Obsidian is a planet mentioned in the series 8 episode "Mummy on the Orient Express". The Twelfth Doctor said that it was a planet of perpetual darkness.[273]


  • Ockora was the homeworld of the Selachians. The native Ockorans were hunted by beings from Kalaya, and surgically altered themselves to become a warrior race known as the Selachians. Ockora was destroyed by a G-bomb in The Final Sanction.[274]

  • The otherwise unnamed Ogron planet, a huge grey ball many light years away from the central spaceways, is the homeworld of the Ogrons and is the setting for the last two episodes of Frontier in Space.[119][275] In the Fourth Doctor Virgin Missing Adventures book The Romance of Crime, it is named Braah.[276] The human designation for the planet is Orestes, according to the novel So Vile a Sin; it is said to be a moon of the gas giant Clytemnestra, in the Agamemnon system.[277]


  • Ogros is a planet of Tau Ceti notable for its amino acid swamps. The Ogri originate from Ogros. Mentioned though not seen in The Stones of Blood.[118]


  • Olympus is a planet visited by the Fourth Doctor and K9 in the comic strip "The Life Bringer" which is home to an immortal near-human race known as the Olympians.[278]

  • The Ood-Sphere is the homeworld of the Ood in the episode "Planet of the Ood" and the two-part story The End of Time. It is a barren, icy planet with vast mountains and caves. A couple of moons and a greyish-pink-coloured ringed planet can be seen in its sky. It lies close to the Sense-Sphere (and according to the Tenth Doctor, is in the same star system). It is located in galactic Sector 242.16.[279][280][281]


  • Omphalos One of the ten planets that had its entire population stolen – bar one person – in IDW's Doctor Who comic series.[vague][citation needed]


  • Oseidon is the home planet of the Kraals from The Android Invasion.[282][283]


  • Oskerion Varan Tak, eponymous character of the Doctor Who Monthly comic strip "The Collector" was from Oskerion.[284]


  • Othrys is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Overod is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]



P




  • Padrivole Regency 9 is a planet mentioned in "Smith and Jones".[285]


  • Pandatorea is a planet with Great Lakes which are home to the Pandatorean conga - a fish longer than a railway train - mentioned in the Sixth Doctor story The Two Doctors.[66]


  • Parakon and the Parakon Corporation attempted to sell rapine to Earth in The Paradise of Death. This would have left the Earth devastated.[286]


  • Paradost is a planet visited in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "The Glorious Dead". Paradost was a planetary museum, home to exhibits of a million species.[clarification needed][115]


  • Peladon is the setting of the Third Doctor serials The Curse of Peladon and The Monster of Peladon, as well as the Virgin New Adventure Legacy and the Big Finish audio adventures The Bride of Peladon and The Prisoner of Peladon. It is a planet ruled by a monarch.[287][288][289][290][291][292]


  • Pen Haxico 2 is the planet Max Capricorn, a cyborg, planned to retire to in "Voyage of the Damned". He mentioned tropical beaches, and ladies who are "I hear, very fond of... metal".[293]


  • Periboea is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Phaester Osiris is the home planet of the Osirans, a powerful race who left their mark on Mars in the Virgin New Adventures novel GodEngine[239] and on Earth in the Fourth Doctor serial Pyramids of Mars.[238]


  • Pheros is a planet visited in the second episode of The Infinite Quest. It is the homeworld of Caw, Baltazar's robotic parrot. The metal birds of Pheros are powered by gold fusion.[22]


  • Phryxus is the home planet of the wolf-like Phryxians, located in NGC4258. The Phryxians appeared in The English Way of Death.[294]


  • Planet 1 is the setting of The Doctor Trap. It is a planet filled with molecular machines, enabling anything its ruler desires to be created.[295]


  • Planet 14 is a planet on which the Doctor encountered the Cybermen, as mentioned in The Invasion and The Doctor Falls.[296]


  • Planet One is the oldest planet in the universe, a lush verdant jungle world of massive trees and gigantic mushrooms. Carved into the universe's oldest cliff face are the words 'HELLO SWEETIE' and a set of temporal co-ordinates written left as a message by River Song, untranslatable until the Eleventh Doctor and Amy Pond land there in "The Pandorica Opens".[297][298]


  • Planet of the Coffee Shops is a planet mentioned in "The Girl Who Waited". According to the Eleventh Doctor, the world voted was Number 1 in the Top Ten Destinations for the Discerning Traveller. Its' name speaks for itself. The Doctor refused to take Amy Pond and Rory Williams there as he thought it hideous, because 'everyone goes to Number One'.


  • Pluto is the setting of the Fourth Doctor serial The Sun Makers, in which it is endowed with six suns and a breathable atmosphere, owing to the engineering practices of the Usurians.[80][81]


  • Polarfrey is a frozen gas giant found in the Gallifrey System, mentioned in Lungbarrow.[299]


  • Polymos is the home planet of the Nestene Consciousness according to the Missing Adventure Millennial Rites[300] and the Past Doctor Adventure Synthespians™.[301]


  • Polongus is a planet mentioned in The Sarah Jane Adventures serial The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith. A species of multi-eyed, slug-like creatures is native to the planet.[302]


  • Poosh is a planet mentioned in "Midnight". Its moon was the subject of study by student Dee Dee Blasco.[255] In "The Stolen Earth", the Lost Moon is revealed to be one of the 27 worlds taken by Davros.[3] It is returned in "Journey's End".[4]


  • Ponton is a planet mentioned in The Ribos Operation.[148]


  • Posikar is a planet mentioned in Mindwarp.[193]


  • Proamon was the homeworld of Kane, the icy ruler of Iceworld in the Seventh Doctor story Dragonfire. It was destroyed a thousand years after his exile.[303][304]


  • Pyro Shika is a planet with several moons mentioned in the Sixth Doctor story Terror of the Vervoids.[260]


  • Pyrovilia is the homeworld of the Pyroviles, rock beings featured in "The Fires of Pompeii". The planet was "lost", prompting the Pyroviles' attempt to colonise the Earth and convert humanity into their own kind using Mount Vesuvius.[305] In "The Stolen Earth", it is revealed that Davros was responsible for the planet's disappearance.[3] It was returned to where it belonged by Donna in "Journey's End".[4]



Q




  • Qualactin is the only planet, apart from Bandraginus V, on which the mineral Oolion occurs naturally. Mentioned in the Fourth Doctor story The Pirate Planet.[58]


  • Quinnis is a planet in the 'Fourth Universe' visited by the First Doctor and Susan as referenced in the serial The Edge of Destruction.[306]



R




  • Raaga is the penal planet of the Terileptils, as mentioned in The Visitation. The prisoners work in tinclavic mines.[307] In The Awakening, it is stated that Raagan tinclavic is used by the people of Harkol.[172]


  • Ravolox is the titular planet of The Mysterious Planet. It is actually Earth, displaced by the Time Lords through time and space and renamed. It features a black light pinnacle of tremendous power.[308]


  • Raxacoricofallapatorius, first mentioned in "World War Three",[309] is the home planet of the Raxacoricofallapatorians,[191] including the criminal Slitheen,[309]Blathereen and Hostrazeen families.[additional citation(s) needed] The difficulty characters have in pronouncing its name is a recurring joke in the show.[citation needed] According to the book Monsters and Villains, the planet is a paradise with burgundy seas and four polar regions.[86] "Love & Monsters" mentions that its sister planet is Clom.[95] The planet's name is misspelled "Rexicoricusphallivatorius" in DVD subtitles.


  • Raxacoricovarlonpatorius is a planet mentioned in the Sarah Jane Adventures episodes Revenge of the Slitheen and The Gift as being one of four planets in the "Raxas Alliance", alongside Raxacoricofallapatorius, Clom and Clix.[97]


  • Reblais Beta is a planet mentioned in the Tenth Doctor New Series Adventures novel The Last Dodo.[65]


  • Red Rocket Rising is a human planet attacked by the Daleks in the audio play Blood of the Daleks.[310] It seems to be in the same planetary system as Telos.[original research?]


  • Red Sky Lost is a planet that was home to a species of felinoid hunters. By the time of Prisoner of the Daleks, only one of the race remained, after the planet was attacked by the Daleks.[43]


  • Refusis II, also called simply Refusis, is the destination for the refugees of humanity in The Ark, as they flee the devastation of Earth by the Sun in 10,000,000 AD. It is a verdant world, and its native people have been rendered invisible and bodiless by a solar flare.[311][312]


  • Rexel 4 is the home planet of the Carrionites, as mentioned in "The Shakespeare Code", located in the Rexel Planetary Configuration.[122]


  • Ribos is the setting for the start of the quest for the Key to Time in The Ribos Operation. Ribos is located in the constellation of Skythra. It is also 116 parsecs from the planet Cyrennis Minima and is 3 light centuries away from the Magellanic Clouds. Ribos takes 64 local years to complete one elliptical orbit around its sun. It has two seasons known as Sun Time and Ice Time, each last for 32 years. Ice Time can be particularly harsh for the natives of the planet.[148][216]


  • Ruta 3 is the home planet of the Rutan Host, described by the Fourth Doctor as icy and inhospitable for humans in the 1977 story Horror of Fang Rock.[313]


  • Ry'leh is a planet featured in the Doctor Who crossover novel All-Consuming Fire.[314] It is based on H. P. Lovecraft's R'lyeh.[citation needed]



S




  • S14 is an alternative name for Deva Loka.[113][114]


  • Salarius is a planet mentioned in The Resurrection Casket.[245]


  • Salostophus is a planet in the constellation of Andromeda. Sabalom Glitz revealed in The Mysterious Planet that this was his home planet.[308]


  • Salvak is a neighbouring planet to Magnus in Mission to Magnus.[228]


  • San Helios is the desert world visited by the Tenth Doctor and Lady Christina de Souza in "Planet of the Dead". San Helios had a population of 100 billion, prior to an attack by an alien swarm. It is located in the Scorpion Nebula, which is on the other side of the universe to Earth, and has three suns – 1 blue, 1 white and 1 orange. The planet had mountains, oceans, wildlife and vegetation, some of which could be found around San Helios City, the planet's capital, until it was all destroyed, turned into sand.[315][316]


  • San Kaloon (a.k.a. Sanclune) is a planet visited by the Ninth Doctor and Rose. It has a glass pyramid. It was mentioned in "Boom Town".[191] It is also mentioned somewhere in the original series, though under a different spelling[citation needed].


  • Santiny is a planet inhabited by a human-like people. It's rich in resources and has huge forests. It was a major setting of Death Comes to Time, and was invaded by the Canisians.[9]


  • Sant's World is a planet mentioned in the book Monsters and Villains in the year five billion.[vague][86]


  • Sarn is the Planet of Fire in the Fifth Doctor serial of the same name. It is a rocky and barren planet with a high amount of volcanic activity.[317][318] The Spanish island of Lanzarote, with its unique volcanic features, was the filming location for Sarn.[citation needed]


  • Saturnyne was the homeworld of the Saturnynians or Sisters of the Water, a race of exo-skeletal creatures, who thrived in the planet's seas, but were later besieged by cracks in time. At first the cracks appeared to pose no real danger and the aliens were able to observe other worlds through them. Eventually however, the true nature of the cracks became apparent and Saturnyne was consumed, forcing the Saturnynians to flee through the smaller cracks to other worlds. It was mentioned in "The Vampires of Venice".[319]


  • Sava is a planet mentioned in The Ark.[311]


  • Scalpor is a planet mentioned in Vengeance on Varos.[320]


  • Scrantek is the home planet of the horrific Fleshsmiths, in the novel Prime Time. It is located in the Brago Nebula, and plagued by ionising radiation and lightning storms that have destroyed the natives' bodies.[71]


  • Scotia is a planet mentioned in The Resurrection Casket.[245]


  • Segonax is a dusty, arid, desert planet with a blue atmosphere. A large, magenta-pink ringed planet is seen in Segonax's skyline. There is little plant life, animal life and water on the planet, but is not without a stable ecosystem or life, including the native Segonaxians. It is also where the Psychic Circus is performing in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy. This is one of many planets that were visited by the Psychic Circus.[15][321]

  • The Sense-Sphere is the home planet of the Sensorites, a telepathic but xenophobic species. It has a high concentration of the valuable element molybdenum. It is located near to the planet Ood-Sphere. It is first seen in The Sensorites.[138][322]


  • Shada is the prison planet of the Time Lords in the serial of the same name.[125]


  • Shadmoch is a planet in the Rexel planetary configuration with a hollow moon.[citation needed]


  • Shallacatop (a.k.a. Challakatop) One of the 27 planets taken by Davros in "The Stolen Earth".[3]


  • Shan Shen is a planet visited in "Turn Left". The planet was inhabited by humanoid species with a somewhat Chinese influenced culture (described[by whom?][citation needed] as a 'Chino' planet), a mixture of flags, pagodas and futuristic skyscrapers influenced by ancient Chinese architecture.[323][324] It has two moons, and lies millions of light years from Earth.[additional citation(s) needed]


  • Shantella Prime is a planet mentioned in the Tenth Doctor comic strip "Which Switch?" in Doctor Who Magazine.[citation needed]


  • Shallanna (a.k.a. Shrillanna) is a planet mentioned in the Eleventh Doctor episode "The Girl Who Waited". Amy Pond walks through an Apalapucian garden, the topiary of which is said according to the interface to be perfect replicas of those found on a Shill governor's mansion garden on Shallanna.[24]

  • A shrub planet, an unnamed planet made entirely of shrubs, was mentioned in the series 8 episode "Mummy on the Orient Express".[273]


  • Sigma home planet of the Doctor Who Monthly character Doctor Asimoff.[citation needed]


  • Sinda Callesta is a planet mentioned in the Eleventh Doctor episode "The Lodger". The Doctor was planning on taking Amy to its fifth moon, but ended up landing on Earth.[325]


  • Siralos is one of the 700 Wonders of the Universe, and it is the planet made of pure psychic energy that the Master takes over in the computer game Doctor Who: Destiny of the Doctors.[326]


  • Sireen is the home planet of one the prisoners in Destiny of the Daleks.[8]


  • Sirinus Minima (aka. Serenus Minima) is a planet mentioned in The Ribos Operation.


  • Sirius IV is an Earth colony planet referenced in Frontier in Space.[119] This planet, as well as Sirius V, Androzani Major, Androzani Minor and Alpha Canis One make up the system of 5 planets known as the Sirius System, which orbits around the star Sirius, which is in fact a binary star, with one white star (Sirius A) and one white dwarf (Sirius B).[additional citation(s) needed]


  • Sirius V is a planet mentioned in City of Death.[327] It is one of the planets in the Sirius System.[additional citation(s) needed]


  • Skaar was where the Graff Vynda-K's men fought in the Alliance Wars mentioned in The Ribos Operation.[148]


  • Skaro is the home planet of the Daleks, the Thals and the Kaleds.[102][328][329] First seen on screen in a cliffhanger at the end of An Unearthly Child,[330] which led into The Daleks, where it was shown more substantially,[328] Skaro was the first planet other than Earth to appear in Doctor Who. It is a rocky, barren planet with little vegetation. A thick fog sometimes rolls over its surface and its upper atmosphere is coloured red.[citation needed] Landmarks include the Lake of Mutations and the Petrified Forest.[102][328]Davros accidentally destroyed the planet using the Hand of Omega in Remembrance of the Daleks, having been tricked by the Seventh Doctor.[102][331] In the 1996 film Doctor Who, Skaro is shown to have two moons.[332] Skaro was seen again in the episode "Asylum of the Daleks".[50] It is referred to by the Movellans in Destiny of the Daleks as D5–Gamma–Z–Alpha.[8][102]


  • Skonnos is the setting for much of The Horns of Nimon.[21][333]


  • Skythros is mentioned in The Ribos Operation.[148]


  • The Slough of The Disunited Planets is the setting of the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip story The Warkeeper's Crown. The Disunited Planets form a galaxy where the inhabitants have waged war since the near the beginning of time and is a place where space travellers avoid at all costs.[334]


  • Sol 3 is another name for Earth. It was used in the beginning scenes of the episode Last of the Time Lords.[335]


  • Solos is the setting of the Third Doctor serial The Mutants. During the day, the ultraviolet rays from its sun makes its atmosphere poisonous to humans. It has four seasons, each lasting five hundred years.[336][337]


  • Sontar (or Sontara) is the homeworld of the Sontarans. The Virgin Missing Adventures novel The Crystal Bucephalus by Craig Hinton names the planet as "Sontara".[116] Yet in "The Sontaran Stratagem" and "The Poison Sky", the Sontarans referred to their home planet as Sontar.[82][100] The official website explicitly states their home planet as Sontar.[338]


  • Spiridon is an inhospitable[to whom?] planet, home to the Spiridons, a race of beings with the natural ability to become invisible. The Daleks kept a secret army there in Planet of the Daleks. In this story, Spiridon is discovered to be a lush, green jungle planet where the plant life is more animal than plant. Temperatures range from tropical in the day to below freezing at night. Its landmarks include the Plain of Stones, molten ice pools (molten ice being ice that never freezes but is extremely cold) and molten ice volcanoes.[339][340] Spiridon is also featured in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip story Emperor of the Daleks![178] and the audio drama Return of the Daleks.[341]


  • Splendurosa is home to a floating coral city, visited in the short story "Grand Theft Planet".[342]


  • Starfall is the setting of the Tenth Doctor New Series Adventures novel The Resurrection Casket, a planet where no technology works except steam power due to the EMP which covers the entire world of Starfall except for the outskirts.[245]


  • Stella Stora is a planet mentioned in Terror of the Vervoids.[260]


  • Sto is a planet located in the Cassavalian Belt. It is the home planet of those, including Astrid Peth and Max Capricorn, aboard the Titanic in "Voyage of the Damned". Although the dominant species is humanlike, Sto is also home to the red, spiny-skinned Zocci,[note 1] and to cyborgs who are treated as an underclass.[293]


  • Stormcage is a prison planet for the worst criminals in the galaxies.[additional citation(s) needed] Dr River Song, or Melody Pond, is put in there for murdering "A good, good man." She continually breaks out throughout the series.[citation needed]


  • Strepto is the home planet of the water hags featured in the Torchwood novel, Something in the Water.[344]The Time Traveller's Almanac confirms that it was one of the 27 planets stolen by the Daleks in "The Stolen Earth".[3][345]


  • Stricium is a planet mentioned in City of Death as the location of the Solarium Panatica gallery.[327]


  • Sunday is the setting of the Tenth Doctor New Series Adventures novel Wetworld. It is inhabited by intelligent creatures resembling terrestrial otters.[346]


  • Svartos is the location of Iceworld in the serial Dragonfire. The planet is locked in its orbit, causing one side of the planet to be in permanent sunshine, while the other side is permanently cold and icy.[303][304]


  • Sycorax is the homeworld of the Sycorax race. Located in the JX82 system, it was broken up into asteroid-starships, including the flagship Fire Trap.[citation needed] It should not be confused with Uranus's moon of the same name.


  • Sylvaniar is a planet visited by the Sixth Doctor in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "Revelation!" It had been infiltrated by Cybermen.[347]


  • Szabo is a planet mentioned in The Creature from the Pit.[92]



T




  • Ta is the headquarters of the Issigri Mining Corporation and features in the Second Doctor serial The Space Pirates. Its parent star is called Pliny.[220][221]


  • Tara is the setting of the Fourth Doctor serial The Androids of Tara.[348][349] It is a planet resembling 19th century Earth,[where?][clarification needed] with lush green fields, attractive landscapes and medieval type forests.[clarification needed]


  • Taurean Nomeworld is one of the ten planets that had its entire population stolen – bar one person – in IDW's Doctor Who comic series.[vague][citation needed]


  • Telos is a colony world of the Cybermen, first seen in The Tomb of the Cybermen.[350][351] It is an arid, mountainous planet that was once an ice planet until the temperatures on the planet rose.[citation needed] The native inhabitants were the Cryons.[352][353]


  • Terileptus is the homeworld of the Terileptils, a race seen in the episode The Visitation.[307] The name of their home planet is mentioned in the Virgin Missing Adventures novel The Dark Path.[107]


  • Terra Alpha is the location of Helen A's misery-free colony (or so some believe) in The Happiness Patrol. It is a gloomy planet with a yellow-purplish atmosphere. The conditions on the planet are terrible and demonstrations are frequent.[354][355]


  • Terradon was the origin of the starliner on Alzarius in the Fourth Doctor serial Full Circle.[13][14]


  • Tersurus is the planet on which Chancellor Goth met the dying Master prior to The Deadly Assassin.[356] It was also the setting of the Comic Relief spoof episode The Curse of Fatal Death. The spoof described the Tersurons as the most gentle, yet most shunned race in the universe, because they communicated through carefully controlled "gastric emissions". They became extinct when they discovered fire.[357]


  • Thoros-Alpha and Thoros-Beta[358] are planets featured in Mindwarp.[193][358] Thoros-Beta is home to the Mentors, an amphibious race. The Doctor first encounters a Mentor – Sil – in Vengeance on Varos and mention of Thoros-Beta is made in that serial.[320] Thoros-Alpha is a ringed planet seen in Thoros-Beta's skyline and looks green through Thoros-Beta's bright neon green atmosphere. Thoros-Beta has bright neon pink oceans.[193]


  • Thuron is the home planet of the cyclopean Castelathurons, in the short story "Island of the Sirens".[342]


  • Tiermann's World is the setting of the Tenth Doctor New Series Adventures novel Sick Building. A planet named after the professor that lives there, it is covered by wintry woods.[359]


  • Tigella is a tropical planet that is the neighbouring planet to Zolfa Thura in Meglos.[360][361]


  • Tigus is a planet visited in The Daleks' Master Plan. It is a young planet and still highly volcanic.[111][362]


  • Titania is a hot gaseous planet, in a system between the secondary and tertiary arms of the Galaxy. Its moon, Dramos, is visited in the novel Burning Heart.[363]


  • Tivoli is mentioned in "The God Complex" as the most invaded planet in the galaxy. The anthem of Tivoli is "Glory To Insert Name Here" and the town planning committee is planning to plant trees along all highways so that invading forces can march in the shade.[364] Tivoli is mentioned again in the season 9 episode "Before the Flood", when one of its various invaders, a warlord known as the Fisher King, is revealed to be responsible for the events of the preceding episode. Both episodes also feature Prentis, a Tivolian undertaker who was charged with bringing the Fisher King’s presumed dead body to Earth in order to bury it.[365][366]


  • Toop was the home planet of the Quevvils and Mantodeans in the New Series Adventures novel Winner Takes All.[367]


  • Traken in the Metulla Orionsis system was the densely forested homeworld to a race of pacifists and the centre of the Traken Union. It was first seen in The Keeper of Traken[368][369] and destroyed by a wave of entropy in the following story Logopolis.[222][369] The Doctor's companion, Nyssa, was a native of Traken.[368]


  • Tranquela is the setting of part of The Ultimate Evil, one of the Missing Episodes that never reached production during Doctor Who's 1985 hiatus.[370]


  • Trenzalore is a planet mentioned in the episode "The Wedding of River Song"[371] and first seen in "The Name of the Doctor".[372] Dorium Maldovar said in "The Wedding of River Song" that on its war-torn fields silence will fall when the oldest question in the universe, "Doctor who?" is asked.[371][373] In "The Name of the Doctor", Trenzalore is revealed to be the final resting place of the Doctor, entombed in his TARDIS.[372][374] In the Eleventh Doctor's swan song, "The Time of the Doctor", the question is revealed to have been asked across all of time by the Time Lords on Gallifrey (sent to safety in a different universe in "The Day of the Doctor") to verify the Doctor's presence, that they might return to the universe through a crack in the space-time fabric created when the TARDIS exploded in "The Big Bang". This attracts the attention of both the Doctor's various enemies, who intend to resume the Time War, and the Church of the Papal Mainframe, who resolve to destroy the planet and avoid this possibility. As a result, bent on protecting the citizens of the town of Christmas on Trenzalore, the Doctor spends centuries fighting off the invading forces until only the Daleks remain. Clara Oswald chastizes the Time Lords' selfishness and points out that he deserves their love and help. They break the regeneration limit established in The Deadly Assassin by sending him a new set of regenerations through the crack, which they close, allowing the Doctor to escape the planet in a new body after hundreds of years of servitude to it.[375][376]


  • Trion is the home planet of the Doctor's companion Turlough, featured in Planet of Fire.[317]


  • Triton is the homeworld of the alien Waro in The Devil Goblins from Neptune.[377]


  • Tythonus (a.k.a. Tithonus) is the home planet of Erato, the globulous green entity in the Fourth Doctor serial The Creature from the Pit.[92]



U




  • Umbeka is a planet mentioned in the Tenth Doctor novel The Resurrection Casket. It is the planet from which ever-lasting matches originate. Its winters last for centuries, while its summers only last a few weeks.[245]


  • Unicepter IV Planet where the natives developed telepathic dreaming technology, visited in the Doctor Who Monthly comic strip "Dreamers of Death".[378]


  • Uranus is the seventh planet in the solar system. It is mentioned in The Daleks' Master Plan as the Galaxy's only source of the element taranium.[111]


  • Urbanka in the Inokshi System, in the Galaxy 1489 is the planet of the frog-like Urbankans, the technologically gifted aliens in the Fifth Doctor serial Four to Doomsday. Once a lush, tropical planet, its habitat was destroyed by radiation.[379]


  • Usurius is the planet of the Usurians, coincidentally a race of usurers who feature in the Fourth Doctor serial The Sun Makers.[80]


  • Utopia is the fictional place the last humans are attempting to reach in the Tenth Doctor episode "Utopia".[229][230] At its co-ordinates, the last humans found darkness, and eventually cannibalised themselves into the 'Toclafane'. The Master unleashes them on present day Earth through a rift opened by a paradox generator installed in the TARDIS.[84]


  • UX-4732 is a planet with a unique insectoid ecosystem, visited by the fourth Doctor in the Doctor Who Monthly comic strip "Spider-God".[380]


  • Uxarieus[141] is the location of the Doomsday Weapon in the Third Doctor serial Colony in Space.[139][141] In the novelisation, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon, it was spelt Exarius.[140]



V




  • Vampire Planet is the unnamed world visited by the Fourth Doctor in the serial State of Decay and subsequently revisited in the Virgin New Adventures story Blood Harvest. It is so-named due to the presence of the Great Vampire, a great enemy of the Time Lords who escaped normal space through a CVE to hibernate on the planet in E-Space. It is covered by forests and wooded countryside.[68][381][382]


  • Vandos is the home planet of the Vandosians, a race featured in the comic strip Mr Nobody.[383]


  • Varos is the setting of the Sixth Doctor serial Vengeance on Varos and the source of the rare ore zeiton-7. It is a violent and barbaric world with a red sun and a magenta-red atmosphere. It is barren and rocky with little or no vegetation.[320][384]


  • Vardon is a planet mentioned in Time-Flight.[206]


  • Varnicon is a planet inhabited by the eight-armed race called the Octovarns. It was mentioned in The Dalek Pocketbook and Space Travellers Guide.[76]


  • Vasilip is another planet from The Happiness Patrol.[354]


  • Vel Consadine is a planet mentioned in "The Satan Pit" as a planet which has a representation of the horned beast.[104]


  • Venessia is another planet from The Ark.[311]


  • Venus is often mentioned during the Third Doctor's era[vague] as the origin of Venusian aikido,[citation needed] Venusian karate,[citation needed] Venusian spearmint[citation needed] and a Venusian lullaby.[citation needed] The planet itself features in the Virgin Missing Adventures novel Venusian Lullaby by Paul Leonard.[385]


  • Verd was a wooded moon of the planet Galxis Bright, visited in the novella Nightdreamers.[151]


  • Verticulus is a planet mentioned in The Space Museum.[208]


  • Vertigan Majoris is a planet mentioned in the First Doctor novel Ten Little Aliens.[386]


  • Vesta 95 was the original destination of the Doctor and Peri in The Twin Dilemma, which he described as "a marvellous place for a holiday".


  • Veturia is another planet from The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]


  • Vij is another planet from Nightmare of Eden.[57]


  • Viperon is the home planet of the Viperox from the animated serial Dreamland.[387]


  • Vita 15, in the future, is the homeworld to a race of warriors which Lytton belongs to.[citation needed]


  • Volag-Noc is an icy prison planet where Baltazar is imprisoned for a time in The Infinite Quest. It is the coldest planet in the galaxy.[22]


  • Vollotha is a planet mentioned in The Two Doctors.[66]


  • Voracia is the home planet of the reptilian Vorellans and their cyber-augmented cousins the Voracians. It is located in the constellation of Skythos.[388]


  • Vortis is the setting of the First Doctor serial The Web Planet; the Menoptera and Zarbi were indigenous species. It is located in the Isop Galaxy. It is characterised by insectoid life forms, acid pools, a Crater of Needles and a Temple of Light. It originally had no moons, but several had later been drawn to it.[389][390]


  • Vulcan is home to a human colony in the Second Doctor serial The Power of the Daleks. It has an earthlike atmosphere, but also has mercury swamps.[391][392] It MAY[according to whom?][original research?] be within Earth's solar system (see Vulcan (hypothetical planet)). It has no connection to the Star Trek planet of Vulcan.


  • Vulpana is another planet mentioned in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy.[15]



W




  • Wilson 1 is a planet mentioned in Mindwarp.[193]


  • Woldyhool is a planet visited by the Doctor and Rose in the Doctor Who Adventures.[vague][citation needed] It is a planet dedicated to hyperfilm production, and is used by the great director Zemm Foolini in the year five billion.


  • Woman Wept is a planet visited by Rose Tyler and the Ninth Doctor where the continental land mass is shaped like a lamenting woman; and the entire ocean, including waves hundreds of feet high, froze in an instant by means of some undisclosed natural disaster. Rose mentioned her visit in "Boom Town".[191] It is one of the planets revealed to have been taken by Davros in "The Stolen Earth".[3]



X




  • Xenon is the home planet of the shapeshifting Whifferdills, of whom Frobisher, the Sixth Doctor's comic strip companion, is an example.[citation needed]


  • Xeros is the location of the Space Museum in the First Doctor serial of that name. The native Xerons are humanoids. Xeros was part of the Morok Empire, located only three light years from Morok itself.[208]


  • Xeriphas is the home planet of the Xeraphin, devastated by crossfire in the Vardon-Kosnax war, referred to in the Fifth Doctor serial Time-Flight.[206] In The King's Demons it is revealed that Kamelion had been a weapon used by invaders of Xeriphas whom the Master had found on the planet



Z




  • Zaakros is another planet from The Leisure Hive. It is famous for having the galaxy's largest flora collection.[1]


  • Zamper, home of the Zamps, features in the Virgin New Adventures story of the same name.[393]


  • Zanak is the "Pirate Planet", a planet which materialises around other planets to steal their mineral wealth, crushing the planets. The planet is hollow inside, but its surface is pleasant, with green fields, lush vegetation and friendly natives.[58][394]


  • Zazz is a planet of jazz-loving humans, visited by the sixth Doctor in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "The Gift".[173]


  • Zeen 4 is another planet from The Leisure Hive. It is famous for its historical reenactments.[1]


  • Zeos is a planet at war with Atrios in The Armageddon Factor. Zeos has a greenish-gray surface.[52][395]


  • Zephon is a planet mentioned in the First Doctor story The Daleks' Master Plan. It is the center of the empire that is the Fifth Galaxy.[111]


  • Zeta Major is a planet mentioned in The Armageddon Factor.[52]


  • Zeta Minor is the farthest planet out in the known universe, and contains samples of anti-matter. It was first seen in Planet of Evil. It is a planet covered by lush, swampy jungle.[263][396]


  • Zil is another planet from Nightmare of Eden.[57]


  • Zolfa-Thura[397] is an apparently barren world in Meglos.[360][397]


  • Zom was a planet where all emotion was outlawed, visited by the fourth Doctor in the Doctor Who Weekly comic strip "City of the Damned".[398]


  • Zygor is the homeworld of the Zygons according to the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Bodysnatchers. It was destroyed by an arachnid race from Tau Ceti known as the Xaranti,[399] though this has been directly contradicted on-screen in the 50th anniversary special "The Day of the Doctor", when it is explicitly stated the Zygon homeworld 'burned' in the first days of the Time War.[32]



Others



Stars and star related objects




  • K37 Gem5[210] is a black hole located deep into space, around which orbits the planet Krop Tor.[209][210]

  • The Magellan Black Hole is a massive black hole seen in the series 8 episode "Mummy on the Orient Express". The Twelfth Doctor mentions a time when the region where the black hole now inhabits was planets as far as the eyes could see, but were all ate up by the black hole.[273]


  • Pliny is the parent star of the planet Ta.[221]



Galaxies



  • The Acteon Galaxy or Acteon Group was the location of the planets Inter Minor and Metebelis 3, according to Carnival of Monsters et al.[171][additional citation(s) needed]

  • The Andromeda Galaxy was the home galaxy of Sabalom Glitz and the Sleepers from The Trial of a Time Lord.[400] It was also visited by the Doctor in the World Distributors novella Doctor Who and the Invasion from Space.[401] In the serial The Ark in Space it was said to be the home of the Wirrn.[137]

  • The Fifth Galaxy is the domain of Zephon, Master of the Fifth Galaxy, in the story The Daleks' Master Plan.[111] In The Monster of Peladon, Galaxy Five is at war with the Federation.[288][402]


  • Galaxy 4 is the location of the Drahvins' home planet in the story Galaxy 4.[121][403]


  • Galaxy 7 is the location of Arcopolis, setting for the novel The Eyeless. Also called the Sculptor Dwarf Galaxy, it is 290,000 light years from Earth.[404]

  • The Isop Galaxy is the location of Vortis from The Web Planet,[389][390] and the Raxacoricofallipatorians.[clarification needed][additional citation(s) needed] In the episode "Bad Wolf", the Face of Boe is said to be the oldest inhabitant of the Isop Galaxy.[226] The Isop Galaxy is also the possible location of the Silver Devastation.[original research?][citation needed]

  • The Wrarth Galaxy was home to the Wrarth Warriors and the vicious Meeps, seen in the Doctor Who Weekly comic strip "The Star Beast" and others.[405]



Systems




  • 4-X-Alpha-4 is the extragalactic star system that is home to the Movellans, as identified by Romana in Destiny of the Daleks.[8]


  • Alpha Centauri is the star system from which the delegate Alpha Centauri, seen in The Curse of Peladon[287] and The Monster of Peladon,[288] originates. The name of Alpha Centauri's planet is not given.

  • The Carra System (a.k.a. Carris System) is said to be the location of the Infinite in the animated story The Infinite Quest. It contains several planets, at least five of which have rings.[22]

  • The Garazone System is the location of the Garazone Bazaar, visited in the audio Sword of Orion.[406]

  • The Inokshi System (a.k.a. Inoksha System) is the system of planets that the planet Urbanka is located in. It was mentioned in the serial Four to Doomsday.[379]

  • The Prion System is said to be the system that the planets Tigella and Zolfa-Thura from Meglos are located.[360][361][397]

  • The Rexel Planetary Configuration is a stellar system that included fourteen worlds (sometimes said to be fourteen stars), including Rexel 4, Shadmoch and Dravidia.[citation needed]

  • The Scarlet System is a system of planets and suns that was home to the billion-year-old Polushi civilisation. It is pulled into the black hole that Krop Tor orbits and destroyed in "The Impossible Planet".[209]



Nebulae and other stellar regions



  • The Dagmar Cluster is a stellar region that was the location of the SS Madame de Pompadour. It was located two-and-a-half galaxies from Earth.[407]


  • E-Space, or Exo-Space, is another universe connected to our own by Charged Vacuum Emboitments, through which entropy is vented from N-Space or Normal-Space to stave off the heat death of the universe. It contains its own planets, including Adric's home world, Alzarius.[citation needed]

  • The Horsehead Nebula is a real nebula that Russell T Davies said was the general area of the home planet of the Ood, Oodsphere[citation needed]. In the story "Planet of the Ood" it is mentioned that Sense-Sphere (from The Sensorites) is a near neighbour and therefore presumably also part of the nebula.[original research?] In The Sarah Jane Adventures story Warriors of Kudlak, this was said to be the location of the Ghost Wars, which had lasted for hundreds of years between an alien race known as the Uvodni and another alien race known as the Malakh until 10 years ago, when a peace treaty was finally established between the two races.[408]

  • The Hercules Cluster is a group of stars observed in The Wheel in Space.[409]


  • Kasterborous is the constellation in which Gallifrey is located.[32][159][293]

  • The Lotus Nebula is mentioned by John Hart as being where he could be experiencing 17 simultaneous pleasures in the episode Exit Wounds.[410]

  • The Medusa Cascade is an Interuniversal Rift, and also a space-time rift.[3] The Master mentions that the Doctor sealed the rift here in "Last of the Time Lords".[84] It is mentioned to have a "15th broken moon" in "The Sontaran Stratagem".[100] In "The Stolen Earth", it is where Davros and his Daleks have assembled their 27 stolen planets around Davros' Crucible.[3] It was also referenced by Evelina in "The Fires of Pompeii" in reference to the Doctor himself: "Your real name is hidden. It burns in the stars, in the Cascade of Medusa herself".[305]


  • N-Space, or Normal-space, is our universe, where heat death should have already occurred, but for the Logopolitans' creation of the CVEs to shunt the excess entropy into other universes, including E-space.[222] Unless otherwise noted, all planets listed are in N-Space.

  • The Obverse, a parallel continuum visited in the novel The Blue Angel[411] possibly[original research?] the original home of Iris Wildthyme. The Enclave is a pocket universe within the Obverse, inhabited by races such as the Gillighast and the Glass Men of Valcea.[citation needed]

  • The Panjassic Asteroid Field is mentioned in the Doctor Who book Monsters and Villains as the isolated asteroid field bought by the Brothers of Hame in the year Five Billion as a base for the evolution acceleration experiments run on trees, resulting in the Forest of Cheem.[86]

  • The Scorpion Nebula is a molecular cloud described as being on the "other side of the universe" to Earth. Within it lies the planet San Helios. The Tritovores originate either within the nebula or nearby.[316]

  • The Silver Devastation is a place mentioned to be the origin of the Face of Boe in "The End of the World".[156] It is also where Professor Yana (the Master in human disguise) claims to have been found as an orphan in "Utopia".[229] It is a vast stellar region full of dead stars surrounded by degenerate and dark matter, created during a collision between two galaxies.[citation needed]

  • The Phylox Series is the location of the planet Andromeda in Castrovalva.[16]

  • The Time Vortex is the continuum that time machines travel through on the way from one destination to another.[citation needed]

  • The Void is the name given by the Time Lords to the infinite nothingness between dimensions, where even time does not exist. According to the Doctor, in "Army of Ghosts", Eternals call it the Howling, and some others call it Hell. It is only traversable using a void ship,[412] and prior to the Time War, by a TARDIS.[413] Various inhabitants of a parallel version of Earth-most notably the Cybermen-were also able to travel across the void to the Earth of the main universe due to the damage caused by the Cult of Skaro's Void ship.[30][412] The Tenth Doctor later sealed the Void by reversing a process previously used to open it, drawing millions of Cybermen and Daleks into the Void in the process.[30] If successfully detonated, the Reality Bomb created by Davros and the Daleks, seen in "Journey's End", would also have destroyed the void. The breaking down of barriers caused by this event allowed Rose Tyler and others who had relocated to the parallel Earth to return to the main universe, and the Tenth Doctor was able to travel there to return Rose, her mother Jackie Tyler and the Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor.[4]



Moons






  • Delta Magna's third moon (known as Delta 3) is the setting of The Key to Time serial The Power of Kroll. It is mostly covered by wet and boggy swamps, with reeds as tall as the TARDIS.[73][414]


  • Dramos is the moon of Titania. It was visited in Burning Heart. A third of its surface is covered by an artificial habitat.[363]

  • The third moon of Grundle was home to the voracious Drashigs.[citation needed]


  • The Lost Moon of Poosh is a moon of the planet Poosh, first mentioned in "Midnight".[255] In "The Stolen Earth", it is revealed as one of the 27 planets stolen by the Daleks.[3]

  • The Moon is the single, natural satellite of Earth. In "Smith and Jones", a hospital was temporarily transported there.[285][415] From the 21st century onwards it is the location of a number of scientific outposts, such as a weather control centre[416][417] and a "T-Mat" hub.[417][418] In the 26th century, it had a prison for political prisoners.[119][417] The Moon was destroyed in the far future in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "Wormwood".[419] In "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship", set in the 24th century, the Eleventh Doctor says, "Try not to bump into the Moon. Otherwise, the races who live there will be livid."[417][420] In "Kill the Moon", set in 2049, the Moon is shown to be a 100-million-year-old egg containing a gigantic, winged creature. At the end of the episode, the Moon is destroyed by the creature's hatching, but is replaced by another egg which it lays.[421][422]


  • Omega Mysterium, Falkus and Flidor are the three moons of Skaro. They were mentioned in both The Daleks comic strip[vague] and the Time War audiobook.[clarification needed][citation needed] First appearing in The Dalek Book, Flidor is a dead world rich in blue-veined gold.[423] Two of the three moons were also seen very briefly at the beginning of the Doctor Who TV movie.[332]


  • Phobos is a moon of Mars created by the Ice Warriors. By the year 2589 it served as a popular destination for extreme sports.[424]


  • Pictos is one of Vortis' moons from The Web Planet.[389][390]


  • Titan is a moon of Saturn visited in The Invisible Enemy.[425][426]

  • There is an unnamed moon or planetoid of Vertigan Majoris that was visited in the First Doctor novel Ten Little Aliens.[386]


  • Voga is also known as the Planet of Gold. A wandering asteroid captured by Jupiter's orbit, it is homeworld to the Vogans and contains more gold than in the rest of the known galaxy. The Cybermen try to destroy it in Revenge of the Cybermen.[190][427]



Asteroids



  • Demons Run[428] is an asteroid on which a military base was built on. It is the birthplace of Melody Pond; its infirmary served as a prison for Amy Pond from shortly after Melody's conception until weeks after the latter's birth. The name of the asteroid, on which the majority of "A Good Man Goes to War" takes place, is derived from an old saying: "Demons run when a good man goes to war," the first line of an eight-line poem.[428][429]


Miscellaneous



  • The Boeshane Peninsula is a human colony city on a so far unnamed desert planet. It is the birthplace of Jack Harkness.[84][430]

  • The Roxborne Peninsula is a 'commerce colony' that Solomon was headed for in the episode "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship".[420]

  • The City State of Binding Light is the nation that sent representatives to witness the Earth's destruction in "The End of the World".[156]


  • Crespallion is the home of the diminutive, blue-skinned humanoid race who run Platform One in "The End of the World". It is described by Raffalo as not being a planet, but rather part of the Jaggit Brocade, affiliated to the Scarlet Junction, Convex 56.[156]


  • Magla is mentioned in Destiny of the Daleks. Magla is actually an eight thousand mile wide amoeba which has grown a crusty shell, often mistaken for a planet.[8]

  • A Parallel Earth was visited by the Third Doctor in Inferno,[431] though is possibly destroyed[original research?] by volcanic eruptions as the Doctor returns to his world. Another Parallel Earth (later given the name Pete's World by the Tenth Doctor)[30] was visited by the Tenth Doctor, Rose and Mickey in the episodes "Rise of the Cybermen",[413] "The Age of Steel",[432] "Doomsday"[30] and "Journey's End".[4] Another parallel Earth called Terra Nova which the Sixth Doctor, Peri and the Rani visited in the story State of Change.[433]


  • Terminus is not a planet, but a planet-sized spacecraft that caused the Big Bang and lies at the centre of the universe. Its engines are capable of causing another explosion that will end the universe, and the radiation leaking from them is the cure for Lazar's Disease.[434]



See also



  • Planets in science fiction


Notes





  1. ^ Bannakaffalatta is identified as coming from Sto in "Voyage of the Damned", although it is not until The End of Time that his species name is identified as Zocci.[343]




References





  1. ^ abcde Fisher, David (writer); Bickford, Lovett (director) (30 August – 20 September 1980). The Leisure Hive. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Strong, James (director) (5 April 2008). "Partners in Crime". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.


  3. ^ abcdefghijklm Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (28 June 2008). "The Stolen Earth". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.


  4. ^ abcdef Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (5 July 2008). "Journey's End". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.


  5. ^ Lyons, Steve (June 1996). Killing Ground. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20474-3.


  6. ^ ab Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Alfava Metraxis". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 12. ISBN 9781846532009.


  7. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Smith, Adam (director) (24 April 2010). "The Time of Angels". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.


  8. ^ abcdefg Nation, Terry (writer); Grieve, Ken (director) (1–22 September 1979). Destiny of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  9. ^ abc Meek, Colin (writer); Freedman, Dan (director) (12 July 2001 – 3 May 2002). Death Comes to Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBCi.


  10. ^ Parkhouse, Steve (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "The Tides of Time" Doctor Who Monthly Issues 61–67 (February – August 1982), Marvel UK


  11. ^ Whitaker, David (w), Jennings, Richard E. (a). "The Amaryll Challenge" TV Century 21 Issues 18–24 (22 May – 3 July 1965), City Productions


  12. ^ Parsons, Paul (2006). The Unofficial Guide: The Science of Doctor Who. Icon Books.


  13. ^ ab Smith, Andrew (writer); Grimwade, Peter (director) (25 October – 15 November 1980). Full Circle. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  14. ^ ab Wright, Mark (October 2014). "Alzarius". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 12. ISBN 9781846532009.


  15. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvw Wyatt, Stephen (writer); Wareing, Alan (director) (14 December 1988 – 4 January 1989). The Greatest Show in the Galaxy. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  16. ^ ab Bidmead, Christopher H. (writer); Cumming, Fiona (director) (4–12 January 1982). Castrovalva. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  17. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (8–16 March 1984). The Caves of Androzani. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  18. ^ Wright, Mark (October 2014). "Androzani Minor and Androzani Major". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 13. ISBN 9781846532009.


  19. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Blackburn, Farren (director) (25 December 2011). "The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  20. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Unnamed Planets: The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 102. ISBN 9781846532009.


  21. ^ abc Read, Anthony (writer); McBain, Kenny (director) (22 December 1979 – 12 January 1980). The Horns of Nimon. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  22. ^ abcdef Barnes, Alan (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (2 April – 30 June 2007). The Infinite Quest. Doctor Who. CBBC.


  23. ^ ab Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Apalapucia". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 14. ISBN 9781846532009.


  24. ^ abc MacRae, Tom (writer); Hurran, Nick (director) (10 September 2011). "The Girl Who Waited". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.


  25. ^ Day, Martin (19 April 2007). Wooden Heart. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 1-84607-226-3.


  26. ^ Darvill-Evans, Peter (April 1993). Deceit. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20387-9.


  27. ^ Chibnall, Chris (writer); Way, Ashley (director) (16 January 2008). "Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang". Torchwood. Series 2. Episode 1. BBC. BBC Two.


  28. ^ ab Collins, Mike (w), Ridgway, John (p), Perkins, Tim (i). "Profits of Doom" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 120–122 (January – March 1987), Marvel UK


  29. ^ Curtis, Richard (writer); Campbell, Jonny (director) (5 June 2010). "Vincent and the Doctor". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.


  30. ^ abcde Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (8 July 2006). "Doomsday". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.


  31. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Stone, Jamie (director) (21 November 2013). "The Last Day". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC Red Button.


  32. ^ abcd Moffat, Steven (writer); Hurran, Nick (director) (23 November 2013). "The Day of the Doctor". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  33. ^ abc Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Gallifrey". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 31. ISBN 9781846532009.


  34. ^ ab Davies, Russell T; Roberts, Gareth (writers); Teague, Colin (director) (1 January 2007). "Invasion of the Bane". The Sarah Jane Adventures. BBC. BBC One.


  35. ^ BBC – The Sarah Jane Adventures – Mr Smith (UK Access Only)[dead link]


  36. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (26 November 2006). "Greeks Bearing Gifts". Torchwood. Series 1. Episode 7. BBC. BBC Three.


  37. ^ Cole, Stephen (writer); Briggs, Nicholas (director) (June 2000). The Apocalypse Element. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  38. ^ Bulis, Christopher (July 1993). Shadowmind. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20394-1.


  39. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Argolis". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 14. ISBN 9781846532009.


  40. ^ ab Nation, Terry (writer); Martin, Richard (director) (22 May – 26 June 1965). The Chase. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  41. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Aridius". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 15. ISBN 9781846532009.


  42. ^ Lyons, Steve (8 September 2005). The Stealers of Dreams. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48638-4.


  43. ^ abcdefgh Baxendale, Trevor (2 April 2009). Prisoner of the Daleks. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 184607-641-2.


  44. ^ Magrs, Paul (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (April 2002). Excelis Dawns. Doctor Who: Excelis. Big Finish Productions.


  45. ^ McIntee, David A. (writer); Salt, Edward (director) (8 April 2002). Excelis Rising. Doctor Who: Excelis. Big Finish Productions.


  46. ^ Hinton, Craig (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (June 2002). Excelis Decays. Doctor Who: Excelis. Big Finish Productions.


  47. ^ Cole, Stephen (writer); Ainsworth, John (director) (April 2002). The Plague Herds of Excelis. Bernice Summerfield. Big Finish Productions.


  48. ^ ab Moffat, Steven (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (31 May 2008). "Silence in the Library". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.


  49. ^ ab Whitaker, David (writer); Barry, Christopher (director) (2–9 January 1965). The Rescue. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  50. ^ ab Moffat, Steven (writer); Hurran, Nick (director) (1 September 2012). "Asylum of the Daleks". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.


  51. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "The Asylum". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 16–17. ISBN 9781846532009.


  52. ^ abc Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Hayes, Michael (director) (20 January – 24 February 1979). The Armageddon Factor. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  53. ^ Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Atrios". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 18. ISBN 9781846532009.


  54. ^ Cole, Stephen (19 April 2007). Sting of the Zygons. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 1-84607-225-5.


  55. ^ Bulis, Christopher (July 1995). The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20447-6.


  56. ^ Brake, Colin (7 July 2003). The Colony of Lies. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48606-6.


  57. ^ abcdefgh Baker, Bob (writer); Bromly, Alan (director) (24 November – 15 December 1979). Nightmare of Eden. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  58. ^ abcdefgh Adams, Douglas (writer); Roberts, Pennant (director) (30 September – 21 October 1978). The Pirate Planet. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  59. ^ ab McCoy, Glen (writer); Roberts, Pennant (director) (9–16 March 1985). Timelash. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  60. ^ ab Miller, David (October 2014). "Karfel". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 40. ISBN 9781846532009.


  61. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Ahearne, Joe (director) (18 June 2005). "The Parting of the Ways". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.


  62. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (18 November 2005). "Children in Need". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  63. ^ ab Roberts, Gareth (8 September 2005). Only Human. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48639-2.


  64. ^ Mortimore, Jim (November 1998). Beltempest. Eighth Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-40593-7.


  65. ^ abcd Rayner, Jacqueline (19 April 2007). The Last Dodo. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 9781846072246.


  66. ^ abc Holmes, Robert (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (16 February – 2 March 1985). The Two Doctors. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  67. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); Hawes, James (director) (29 April 2006). "School Reunion". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.


  68. ^ ab Dicks, Terrance (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (22 November – 13 December 1980). State of Decay. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  69. ^ Gatiss, Mark (October 1994). St Anthony's Fire. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20423-9.


  70. ^ Moore, Steve (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "War of the Words" Doctor Who Issue 51 (April 1981), Marvel UK


  71. ^ ab Tucker, Mike (July 2000). Prime Time. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-55597-1.


  72. ^ Bishop, David (writer); Bentley, Ken (director) (May 2009). Enemy of the Daleks. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  73. ^ ab Holmes, Robert (writer); Stewart, Norman (director) (23 December 1978 – 13 January 1979). The Power of Kroll. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  74. ^ Martin, Philip (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (January 2004). The Creed of the Kromon. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  75. ^ Anghelides, Peter (4 January 2007). Another Life. Torchwood. BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-48653-4.


  76. ^ abc Nation, Terry (7 October 1965). The Dalek Pocketbook and Space Travellers Guide. Panther Books.


  77. ^ Lee, Tony (w), Guerra, Pia, Stefano Martino, Kelly Yates (a). Doctor Who: The Forgotten (August 2008–January 2009), IDW Publishing


  78. ^ Russell, Gary (4 August 2005). Spiral Scratch. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48626-0.


  79. ^ Ahern, Cecelia (8 May 2014). The Bog Warrior. Time Trips. BBC Books. ASIN B00K2U4OGE.


  80. ^ abc Holmes, Robert (writer); Roberts, Pennant (director) (26 November – 17 December 1977). The Sun Makers. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  81. ^ ab Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Pluto". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 66. ISBN 9781846532009.


  82. ^ ab Raynor, Helen (writer); Mackinnon, Douglas (director) (3 May 2008). "The Poison Sky". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 5. BBC. BBC One.


  83. ^ ab Dicks, Terrance (5 May 1998). Catastrophea. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-40584-8.


  84. ^ abcde Davies, Russell T (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (30 June 2007). "Last of the Time Lords". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.


  85. ^ ab Baker, Pip; Baker, Jane (writers); Morgan, Andrew (director) (7–28 September 1987). Time and the Rani. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  86. ^ abcd Richards, Justin (19 May 2005). Doctor Who: Monsters and Villains. BBC Books. ISBN 9780563486329.


  87. ^ abc Davies, Russell T (writer); Grant, Brian (director) (7 May 2005). "The Long Game". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 7. BBC. BBC One.


  88. ^ Munro, Rona (writer); Wareing, Alan (director) (22 November – 6 December 1989). Survival. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  89. ^ McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Unnamed Planet: Survival". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd: 98. ISBN 9781846532009.


  90. ^ Roberts, Gareth (February 1993). The Highest Science. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20377-1.


  91. ^ ab Kohll, Malcolm (writer); Clough, Chris (director) (2–16 November 1987). Delta and the Bannermen. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  92. ^ abcd Fisher, David (writer); Barry, Christopher (director) (27 October – 17 November 1979). The Creature from the Pit. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  93. ^ Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Chloris". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 19. ISBN 9781846532009.


  94. ^ Russell, Gary (writer/director) (2 August – 6 September 2002). Real Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBCi.


  95. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Zeff, Dan (director) (17 June 2006). "Love & Monsters". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.


  96. ^ Roberts, Gareth (writer); Troughton, Alice (director) (24 September 2007). Revenge of the Slitheen. The Sarah Jane Adventures. CBBC.


  97. ^ ab Parkin, Lance & Pearson, Lars (2012). A History: An Unauthorised History of the Doctor Who Universe (3rd Edition), p. 336. Mad Norwegian Press, Des Moines.
    ISBN 978-193523411-1.



  98. ^ ab Boucher, Chris (writer); Briant, Michael E. (director) (29 January – 19 February 1977). The Robots of Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  99. ^ Ford, Phil (writer); Way, Ashley (director) (3–4 October 2011). Sky. The Sarah Jane Adventures. CBBC.


  100. ^ abcd Raynor, Helen (writer); Mackinnon, Douglas (director) (26 April 2008). "The Sontaran Stratagem". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.


  101. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Crinoth". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 20. ISBN 9781846532009.


  102. ^ abcde Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Skaro". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 70. ISBN 9781846532009.


  103. ^ Leopold, Guy (writer); Barry, Christopher (director) (22 May – 19 June 1971). The Dæmons. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  104. ^ abcde Jones, Matt (writer); Strong, James (director) (10 June 2006). "The Satan Pit". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One.


  105. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Letts, Barry (director) (3 February 1973). "Episode Two". Carnival of Monsters. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  106. ^ Gray, Scott (w), Geraghty, Martin (a). "The Land of Happy Endings" Doctor Who Magazine Issue 337 (10 December 2003), Panini Comics


  107. ^ ab McIntee, David A. (March 1997). The Dark Path. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20503-0.


  108. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (7 June 2008). "Forest of the Dead". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One.


  109. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Martinus, Derek (director) (3–24 January 1970). Spearhead from Space. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  110. ^ Pascoe, Phil (writer); Briggs, Nicholas (director) (29 August 2002). ...ish. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  111. ^ abcdefgh Nation, Terry; Spooner, Dennis (writers); Camfield, Douglas (director) (13 November 1965 – 29 January 1966). The Daleks' Master Plan. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  112. ^ Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Desperus". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 22. ISBN 9781846532009.


  113. ^ ab Bailey, Christopher (writer); Grimwade, Peter (director) (1–9 February 1982). Kinda. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  114. ^ ab Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Deva Loka". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 22. ISBN 9781846532009.


  115. ^ ab Gray, Scott (w), Geraghty, Martin, Roger Langridge (p), Smith, Robin (i). "The Glorious Dead" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 487–496 (9 February – 18 October 2000), Panini Comics


  116. ^ abc Hinton, Craig (1994). The Crystal Bucephalus. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20429-8.


  117. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Dido". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 23. ISBN 9781846532009.


  118. ^ ab Fisher, David (writer); Blake, Darrol (director) (28 October – 18 November 1978). The Stones of Blood. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  119. ^ abcd Hulke, Malcolm (writer); Bernard, Paul (director) (24 February – 31 March 1973). Frontier in Space. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  120. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Draconia". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 23. ISBN 9781846532009.


  121. ^ ab Emms, William (writer); Martinus, Derek (director) (11 September – 2 October 1965). Galaxy 4. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  122. ^ ab Roberts, Gareth (writer); Palmer, Charles (director) (7 April 2007). "The Shakespeare Code". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.


  123. ^ ab Bland, Robin (writer); Barry, Christopher (director) (3–24 January 1976). The Brain of Morbius. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  124. ^ Richards, Justin (25 June 2009). The Planet of Oblivion. The Darksmith Legacy. BBC Books. ISBN 9781405905190.


  125. ^ ab Adams, Douglas (writer); Roberts, Pennant (director) (6 July 1992). Shada (home video)|format= requires |url= (help). Doctor Who. BBC.


  126. ^ Tucker, Mike (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (June 2001). Dust Breeding. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  127. ^ ab Ashby, Norman (writer); Barry, Morris (director) (10 August – 7 September 1968). The Dominators. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  128. ^ McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Dulkis". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 24. ISBN 9781846532009.


  129. ^ ab Parkin, Lance & Pearson, Lars (2012). A History: An Unauthorised History of the Doctor Who Universe (3rd Edition), p. 588. Mad Norwegian Press, Des Moines.
    ISBN 978-193523411-1.



  130. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (1 January 2010). "Part Two". The End of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One. Chancellor: One planet keeps being repeated, my lord. One constant word. Earth. Visionary: Earth. Earth. Earth. Earth. Earth. Earth... Chancellor: Planet Earth. Indigenous species, the human race.


  131. ^ Hammond, Peter J. (writer); Troughton, Alice (director) (12 November 2006). "Small Worlds". Torchwood. Series 1. Episode 5. BBC. BBC Three.


  132. ^ Coburn, Anthony (writer); Hussein, Waris (director) (23 November – 14 December 1963). An Unearthly Child. Doctor Who. BBC.


  133. ^ Lucarotti, John (writer); Hussein, Waris; Crockett, John (directors) (22 February – 4 April 1964). Marco Polo. Doctor Who. BBC.


  134. ^ Lucarotti, John (writer); Crockett, John (director) (23 May – 13 June 1964). The Aztecs. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  135. ^ Spooner, Dennis (writer); Hirsch, Henric (director) (8 August – 12 September 1964). The Reign of Terror. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  136. ^ McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Eden". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 26. ISBN 9781846532009.


  137. ^ ab Holmes, Robert (writer); Bennett, Rodney (director) (25 January – 15 February 1975). The Ark in Space. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  138. ^ ab Newman, Peter R. (writer); Pinfield, Mervyn; Cox, Frank (directors) (20 June – 1 August 1964). The Sensorites. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  139. ^ ab Hulke, Malcolm (writer); Briant, Michael E. (director) (10 April – 15 May 1971). Colony in Space. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  140. ^ ab Hulke, Malcolm (April 1974). Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. Doctor Who novelisations. Target Books. ISBN 0-426-10372-6.


  141. ^ abc Miller, David (October 2014). "Uxarieus". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 107. ISBN 9781846532009.


  142. ^ ab Nation, Terry (writer); Briant, Michael E. (director) (23 February – 16 March 1974). Death to the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  143. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Exxilon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 28. ISBN 9781846532009.


  144. ^ Orman, Kate (December 1993). The Left-Handed Hummingbird. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20404-2.


  145. ^ Dicks, Terrance (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (23 November 1983). The Five Doctors. Doctor Who. PBS.


  146. ^ ab Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "The Eye of Orion". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 29. ISBN 9781846532009.


  147. ^ Hulke, Malcolm (writer); Russell, Paddy (director) (12 January – 16 February 1974). Invasion of the Dinosaurs. Doctor Who. BBC1. BBC1.


  148. ^ abcdefgh Holmes, Robert (writer); Spenton-Foster, George (director) (2–23 September 1978). The Ribos Operation. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  149. ^ abc Bidmead, Christopher H. (writer); Jones, Ron (director) (26 January – 3 February 1984). Frontios. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  150. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Frontios". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 29. ISBN 9781846532009.


  151. ^ ab Arden, Tom (May 2002). Nightdreamers. Telos Doctor Who novellas. Telos Publishing. ISBN 1-903889-06-5.


  152. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Teague, Colin (23 June 2007). "The Sound of Drums". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.


  153. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Gallifrey". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 30–31. ISBN 9781846532009.


  154. ^ Hulke, Malcolm; Dicks, Terrance (writers); Maloney, David (director) (19 April – 21 June 1969). The War Games. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  155. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Bromly, Alan (director) (15 December 1973 – 5 January 1974). The Time Warrior. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  156. ^ abcd Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (2 April 2005). "The End of the World". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.


  157. ^ Shearman, Robert (writer); Ahearne, Joe (director) (30 April 2005). "Dalek". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.


  158. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Clark, Richard (director) (14 April 2007). "Gridlock". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.


  159. ^ ab Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Gallifrey". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 30. ISBN 9781846532009.


  160. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (1 January 2010). "Part Two". The End of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  161. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Bennett, Rodney (director) (22 February – 1 March 1975). The Sontaran Experiment. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  162. ^ ab Nation, Terry (writer); Martinus, Derek (director) (9 October 1965). "Mission to the Unknown". Doctor Who. Season 3. Episode 5. BBC. BBC1.


  163. ^ "Visit Doctor Who's spectacular colony world... in Valencia".


  164. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Maloney, David (director) (28 December 1968 – 18 January 1969). The Krotons. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  165. ^ McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Unnamed Planets: The Krotons". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 94. ISBN 9781846532009.


  166. ^ Richards, Justin (24 September 2009). Doctor Who: The Ultimate Monster Guide. BBC Books.


  167. ^ Moore, Leah, John Reppion (w), Templesmith, Ben (a). Doctor Who: The Whispering Gallery (February 2009), IDW Publishing


  168. ^ Roberts, Gareth (writer); Way, Ashley (director) (25 December 2005). "Attack of the Graske". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC Red Button.


  169. ^ Wyatt, Stephen (writer); Mallett, Nicholas (director) (5–26 October 1987). Paradise Towers. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  170. ^ Bulis, Christopher (April 1996). The Eye of the Giant. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20469-7.


  171. ^ abcde Holmes, Robert (writer); Letts, Barry (director) (27 January – 17 February 1973). Carnival of Monsters. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  172. ^ ab Pringle, Eric (writer); Morris, Michael Owen (director) (19–20 January 1984). The Awakening. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  173. ^ ab Delano, Jamie (w), Ridgway, John (p), Perkins, Tim (i). "The Gift" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 123–126 (April – July 1987), Marvel UK


  174. ^ ab Cole, Stephen (19 May 2005). The Monsters Inside. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48629-5.


  175. ^ Cornell, Paul (15 October 1992). Love and War. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20385-2.


  176. ^ Delano, Jamie (w), Ridgway, John (a). "Time Bomb" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 114–116 (July – September 1986), Marvel UK


  177. ^ Starkings, Richard, John Tomlinson (w), Sullivan, Lee (a). "Nemesis of the Daleks" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 152–155 (September – December 1989), Marvel UK


  178. ^ ab Cornell, Paul (w), Sullivan, Lee (a). "Emperor of the Daleks!" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 197–202 (17 March – 4 August 1993), Marvel UK


  179. ^ Richards, Justin (10 May 2007). Doctor Who: Creatures and Demons. BBC Books.


  180. ^ Stone, Dave (March 2002). Citadel of Dreams. Telos Doctor Who novellas. Telos Publishing. ISBN 1-903889-04-9.


  181. ^ Gaiman, Neil (writer); Clark, Richard (director) (14 May 2011). "The Doctor's Wife". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.


  182. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "House". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 32. ISBN 9781846532009.


  183. ^ Magrs, Paul (September 1998). The Scarlet Empress. Eighth Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-40595-3.


  184. ^ Platt, Marc (writer); Edwards, Barnaby (director) (April 2008). The Skull of Sobek. Doctor Who: Eighth Doctor Adventures. Big Finish Productions.


  185. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Inter Minor". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 33. ISBN 9781846532009.


  186. ^ Steven, Anthony (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (22–30 March 1984). The Twin Dilemma. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  187. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Jaconda". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 33. ISBN 9781846532009.


  188. ^ ab Michalowski, Mark (4 September 2008). Shining Darkness. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 1-84607-557-2.


  189. ^ Wallace, Nick (September 2005). Fear Itself. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48634-1.


  190. ^ ab Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Voga". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 109. ISBN 9781846532009.


  191. ^ abcd Davies, Russell T (writer); Ahearne, Joe (director) (4 June 2005). "Boom Town". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.


  192. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); Metzstein, Saul (director) (15 September 2012). "A Town Called Mercy". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.


  193. ^ abcdef Martin, Philip (writer); Jones, Ron (director) (4–25 October 1986). Mindwarp. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  194. ^ Orman, Kate (August 1996). Return of the Living Dad. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20482-4.


  195. ^ Orman, Kate (February 1997). The Room with No Doors. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20500-6.


  196. ^ Tucker, Mike (writer); Briggs, Nicholas (director) (May 2000). The Genocide Machine. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  197. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Karn". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 40. ISBN 9781846532009.


  198. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Hayes, John (director) (14 November 2013). "The Night of the Doctor". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC Red Button.


  199. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Karn". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 41. ISBN 9781846532009.


  200. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Mayne, Lennie (director) (2–23 October 1976). The Hand of Fear. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  201. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Kastria". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 42. ISBN 9781846532009.


  202. ^ Richards, Justin (19 May 2005). The Clockwise Man. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48628-7.


  203. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Kembel". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 42. ISBN 9781846532009.


  204. ^ Robinson, Nigel (October 1991). Timewyrm: Apocalypse. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20359-3.


  205. ^ Chibnall, Chris (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (19 May 2007). "42". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 7. BBC. BBC One.


  206. ^ abc Grimwade, Peter (writer); Jones, Ron (director) (22–30 March 1982). Time-Flight. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  207. ^ Nye, Simon (writer); Morshead, Catherine (director) (15 May 2010). "Amy's Choice". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 7. BBC. BBC One.


  208. ^ abcde Jones, Glyn (writer); Pinfield, Mervyn (director) (24 April – 15 May 1965). The Space Museum. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  209. ^ abcde Jones, Matt (writer); Strong, James (director) (3 June 2006). "The Impossible Planet". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.


  210. ^ abcde Miller, David (October 2014). "Krop Tor". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 43. ISBN 9781846532009.


  211. ^ Gray, Scott (w), Sullivan, Lee (a). "Children of the Revolution" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 312–317 (9 January – 29 May 2002), Panini Comics


  212. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Lakertya". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 43. ISBN 9781846532009.


  213. ^ Brake, Colin (21 September 2006). The Price of Paradise. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48652-X.


  214. ^ Boucher, Chris (writer); Roberts, Pennant (director) (1–22 January 1977). The Face of Evil. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  215. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Unnamed Planets: The Face of Evil". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 96. ISBN 9781846532009.


  216. ^ ab McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Ribos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd: 67. ISBN 9781846532009.


  217. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "The Library". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 44. ISBN 9781846532009.


  218. ^ Chapman, Patrick (writer); Thompson, Mark J (director) (5 February 2007). Fear of the Daleks. Doctor Who: The Companion Chronicles. Big Finish Productions.


  219. ^ Davis, Rob (w), Collins, Mike (p), Roach, David A. (i). "The Woman Who Sold the World" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 381–384 (2 May – 25 July 2007), Panini Comics


  220. ^ ab Holmes, Robert (writer); Hart, Michael (director) (8 March – 12 April 1969). The Space Pirates. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  221. ^ abc Miller, David (October 2014). "Ta". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 77. ISBN 9781846532009.


  222. ^ abc Bidmead, Christopher H. (writer); Grimwade, Peter (director) (28 February – 21 March 1981). Logopolis. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  223. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Logopolis". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 44. ISBN 9781846532009.


  224. ^ Robson, Eddie (writer); Briggs, Nicholas (director) (11–18 February 2007). Human Resources. Doctor Who: Eighth Doctor Adventures. BBC. BBC7.


  225. ^ Lane, Andy; Mortimore, Jim (May 1993). Lucifer Rising. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20388-7.


  226. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Ahearne, Joe (director) (11 June 2005). "Bad Wolf". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.


  227. ^ Parkhouse, Steve (w), Dillon, Steve (a). "The Moderator" Doctor Who Monthly/The Official Doctor Who Magazine Issues 84; 86–87 (January 1984; March – April 1984), Marvel UK


  228. ^ ab Martin, Philip (12 July 1990). Mission to Magnus. Doctor Who: The Missing Episodes. Target Books. ISBN 0-426-20347-X.


  229. ^ abc Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (16 June 2007). "Utopia". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.


  230. ^ ab Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Malcassairo". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 45. ISBN 9781846532009.


  231. ^ Bailey, Christopher (writer); Cumming, Fiona (director) (18–26 January 1983). Snakedance. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  232. ^ Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Manussa". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 45. ISBN 9781846532009.


  233. ^ Nation, Terry (writer); Gorrie, John (director) (11 April – 16 May 1964). The Keys of Marinus. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  234. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Marinus". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 46. ISBN 9781846532009.


  235. ^ Morrison, Grant (w), Ridgway, John (p), Perkins, Tim (i). "The World Shapers" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 127–129 (August – October 1987), Marvel UK


  236. ^ Davies, Russell T; Ford, Phil (writers); Harper, Graeme (director) (15 November 2009). "The Waters of Mars". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  237. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Mars". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 48. ISBN 9781846532009.


  238. ^ ab Harris, Stephen (writer); Russell, Paddy (director) (25 October – 15 November 1975). Pyramids of Mars. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  239. ^ ab Hinton, Craig (June 1996). GodEngine. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20473-5.


  240. ^ Whitaker, David (writer); Ferguson, Michael (director) (21 March – 2 May 1970). The Ambassadors of Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  241. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Mars". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 49. ISBN 9781846532009.


  242. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Mechanus". The Essential Doctor Who (3: Alien Worlds): 54.


  243. ^ Greenhorn, Stephen (writer); Troughton, Alice (director) (10 May 2008). "The Doctor's Daughter". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.


  244. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Messaline". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 55. ISBN 9781846532009.


  245. ^ abcde Richards, Justin (13 April 2006). The Resurrection Casket. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48642-2.


  246. ^ Ford, Phil (writer); Agnew, Joss (director) (29 September 2008). "Part One". The Last Sontaran. The Sarah Jane Adventures. CBBC.


  247. ^ Shearman, Robert (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (14 November 2002). The Maltese Penguin. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  248. ^ ab Sloman, Robert (writer); Briant, Michael E. (director) (19 May – 23 June 1973). The Green Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  249. ^ abcdef Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Metebelis 3". The Essential Doctor Who (3: Alien Worlds): 56.


  250. ^ Sloman, Robert (writer); Letts, Barry (director) (4 May – 8 June 1974). Planet of the Spiders. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  251. ^ Cross, Neil (writer); Payne, Jamie (director) (20 April 2013). "Hide". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One.


  252. ^ Ford, Phil (writer); Martin, Charles (director) (19 November 2007). "Part Two". The Lost Boy. The Sarah Jane Adventures. CBBC.


  253. ^ Roberts, Gareth (April 1997). The Well-Mannered War. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20506-5.


  254. ^ "Doctor Who Rogues Gallery: The Rani - BBC America".


  255. ^ abc Davies, Russell T (writer); Troughton, Alice (director) (14 June 2008). "Midnight". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.


  256. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Midnight". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 57. ISBN 9781846532009.


  257. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Stewart, Norman (director) (7–28 January 1978). Underworld. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  258. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Mira". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 57. ISBN 9781846532009.


  259. ^ Gray, Scott (w), Ross, John (a). "Uroboros" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 319–322 (24 July – 16 October 2002), Panini Comics


  260. ^ abc Baker, Pip; Baker, Jane (writers); Clough, Chris (director) (1–22 November 1986). Terror of the Vervoids. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  261. ^ Pedler, Kit; Davis, Gerry (writers); Martinus, Derek (director) (8–29 October 1966). The Tenth Planet. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  262. ^ Platt, Marc (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (July 2002). Spare Parts. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  263. ^ ab Marks, Louis (writer); Maloney, David (director) (27 September – 18 October 1975). Planet of Evil. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  264. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Xeros". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 112. ISBN 9781846532009.


  265. ^ ab Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Necros". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 60. ISBN 9781846532009.


  266. ^ ab Saward, Eric (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (23–30 March 1985). Revelation of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  267. ^ Moore, Steve (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "The Time Witch" Doctor Who Weekly Issues 35–38 (12 June – 3 July 1980), Marvel UK


  268. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Hawes, James (director) (15 April 2006). "New Earth". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.


  269. ^ abc Guerrier, Simon (October 2014). "New Earth". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 61. ISBN 9781846532009.


  270. ^ Mills, Pat, John Wagner (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "The Dogs of Doom" Doctor Who Weekly Issues 27–34 (16 April – 5 June 1980), Marvel UK


  271. ^ Leonard, Paul (October 1996). Speed of Flight. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20487-5.


  272. ^ Gray, Scott (w), Geraghty, Martin (p), Roach, David A. (i). "Oblivion" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 323–328 (13 November 2002 – 2 April 2003), Panini Comics


  273. ^ abc Mathieson, Jamie (writer); Wilmshurst, Paul (director) (11 October 2014). "Mummy on the Orient Express". Doctor Who. Series 8. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.


  274. ^ Lyons, Steve (5 July 1999). The Final Sanction. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-55584-X.


  275. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Unnamed Planets: Frontier in Space". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 95. ISBN 9781846532009.


  276. ^ Roberts, Gareth (January 1995). The Romance of Crime. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20435-2.


  277. ^ Aaronovitch, Ben; Orman, Kate (May 1997). So Vile a Sin. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20484-0.


  278. ^ Moore, Steve (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "The Life Bringer" Doctor Who Issues 49–50 (February – March 1981), Marvel UK


  279. ^ Temple, Keith (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (19 April 2008). "Planet of the Ood". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.


  280. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (25 December 2009 – 1 January 2010). The End of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  281. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "The Ood-Sphere". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 62. ISBN 9781846532009.


  282. ^ Nation, Terry (writer); Letts, Barry (director) (22 November – 13 December 1975). The Android Invasion. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  283. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Oseidon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 63. ISBN 9781846532009.


  284. ^ Moore, Steve (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "The Collector" Doctor Who Issue 46 (November 1980), Marvel UK


  285. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Palmer, Charles (director) (31 March 2007). "Smith and Jones". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 1.


  286. ^ Letts, Barry (writer); Clarke, Phil (director) (27 August – 24 September 1993). The Paradise of Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC Radio 5.


  287. ^ ab Hayles, Brian (writer); Mayne, Lennie (director) (29 January – 19 February 1972). The Curse of Peladon. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  288. ^ abc Hayles, Brian (writer); Mayne, Lennie (director) (23 March – 27 April 1974). The Monster of Peladon. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  289. ^ Russell, Gary (April 1994). Legacy. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20412-3.


  290. ^ Edwards, Barnaby (writer/director) (January 2008). The Bride of Peladon. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  291. ^ Wright, Mark; Scott, Cavan (writers); Bryant, Nicola (director) (September 2009). The Prisoner of Peladon. Doctor Who: The Companion Chronicles. Big Finish Productions.


  292. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Peladon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 64–65. ISBN 9781846532009.


  293. ^ abc Davies, Russell T (writer); Strong, James (director) (25 December 2007). "Voyage of the Damned". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  294. ^ Roberts, Gareth (March 1996). The English Way of Death. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20466-2.


  295. ^ Messingham, Simon (4 September 2008). The Doctor Trap. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 1-84607-558-0.


  296. ^ Sherwin, Derrick (writer); Camfield, Douglas (director) (2 November – 21 December 1968). The Invasion. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  297. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Haynes, Toby (director) (19 June 2010). "The Pandorica Opens". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.


  298. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Planet One". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 66. ISBN 9781846532009.


  299. ^ Platt, Marc (20 March 1997). Lungbarrow. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20502-2.


  300. ^ Hinton, Craig (October 1995). Millennial Rites. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20455-7.


  301. ^ Hinton, Craig (July 2004). Synthespians™. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0563486171.


  302. ^ Roberts, Gareth (writer); Agnew, Joss (director) (29–30 October 2009). The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith. The Sarah Jane Adventures. CBBC.


  303. ^ ab Briggs, Ian (writer); Clough, Chris (director) (23 November – 7 December 1987). Dragonfire. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  304. ^ ab Miller, David (October 2014). "Svartos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 76. ISBN 9781846532009.


  305. ^ ab Moran, James (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (12 April 2008). "The Fires of Pompeii". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.


  306. ^ Whitaker, David (writer); Martin, Richard; Cox, Frank (directors) (8–15 February 1964). The Edge of Destruction. Doctor Who. BBC.


  307. ^ ab Saward, Eric (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (15–23 February 1982). The Visitation. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  308. ^ ab Holmes, Robert (writer); Mallett, Nicholas (director) (6–27 September 1986). The Mysterious Planet. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  309. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Boak, Keith (director) (23 April 2005). "World War Three". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 5. BBC. BBC One.


  310. ^ Lyons, Steve (writer); Briggs, Nicholas (director) (31 December 2006 – 7 January 2007). Blood of the Daleks. Doctor Who: Eighth Doctor Adventures. BBC. BBC7.


  311. ^ abc Erickson, Paul; Scott, Lesley (writers); Imison, Michael (director) (5–26 March 1966). The Ark. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  312. ^ McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Refusis II". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 67. ISBN 9781846532009.


  313. ^ Dicks, Terrance (writer); Russell, Paddy (director) (3–24 September 1977). Horror of Fang Rock. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  314. ^ Lane, Andy (June 1994). All-Consuming Fire. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20415-8.


  315. ^ Tribe, Steve (April 2009). Doctor Who: Companions and Allies. BBC Books. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-84607-749-4.


  316. ^ ab Davies, Russell T; Roberts, Gareth (writers); Strong, James (director) (11 April 2009). "Planet of the Dead". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  317. ^ ab Grimwade, Peter (writer); Cumming, Fiona (director) (23 February – 2 March 1984). Planet of Fire. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  318. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Sarn". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 68. ISBN 9781846532009.


  319. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); Campbell, Jonny (director) (8 May 2010). "The Vampires of Venice". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.


  320. ^ abc Martin, Philip (writer); Jones, Ron (director) (19–26 January 1985). Vengeance on Varos. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  321. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Segonax". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 69. ISBN 9781846532009.


  322. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "The Sense-Sphere". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 69. ISBN 9781846532009.


  323. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (21 June 2008). "Turn Left". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.


  324. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Shan Shen". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 69. ISBN 9781846532009.


  325. ^ Roberts, Gareth (writer); Morshead, Catherine (director) (12 June 2010). "The Lodger". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.


  326. ^ Studio Fish (5 December 1997). Doctor Who: Destiny of the Doctors. Windows. BBC Multimedia.


  327. ^ ab Agnew, David (writer); Hayes, Michael (director) (29 September – 20 October 1979). City of Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  328. ^ abc Nation, Terry (writer); Barry, Christopher; Martin, Richard (directors) (21 December 1963 – 1 February 1964). The Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC.


  329. ^ Nation, Terry (writer); Maloney, David (director) (8 March – 12 April 1975). Genesis of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  330. ^ Coburn, Anthony (writer); Hussein, Waris (director) (14 December 1963). "The Firemaker". An Unearthly Child. Doctor Who. BBC.


  331. ^ Aaronovitch, Ben (writer); Morgan, Andrew (director) (5–26 October 1988). Remembrance of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  332. ^ ab Jacobs, Matthew (writer); Sax, Geoffrey (director) (14 May 1996). Doctor Who. Fox.


  333. ^ McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Skonnos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 72. ISBN 9781846532009.


  334. ^ Barnes, Alan (w), Geraghty, Martin (p), Roach, David A. (i). "The Warkeeper's Crown" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 378–380 (31 January – 28 March 2007), Panini Comics


  335. ^ "Utopia / The Sound of Drums / Last of the Time Lords". www.drwhoguide.com.


  336. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Barry, Christopher (director) (8 April – 13 May 1972). The Mutants. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  337. ^ McGown, Alistair (October 2014). "Solos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 72. ISBN 9781846532009.


  338. ^ "Sontarans". BBC One - Doctor Who, Series 6. Retrieved 21 March 2015.


  339. ^ Nation, Terry (writer); Maloney, David (director) (7 April – 12 May 1973). Planet of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  340. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Spiridon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 75. ISBN 9781846532009.


  341. ^ Briggs, Nicholas (writer); Ainsworth, John (director) (December 2006). Return of the Daleks. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  342. ^ ab Hickman, Clayton, ed. (1 August 2008). Doctor Who Storybook 2009. Panini Comics. ISBN 978-1846530678.


  343. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (25 December 2009). "Part One". The End of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  344. ^ Baxendale, Trevor (6 March 2008). Something in the Water. Torchwood. BBC Books. ISBN 978-1-84607-437-0.


  345. ^ Tribe, Steve (13 November 2008). Doctor Who: The Time Traveller's Almanac. BBC Books. ISBN 978-1-84607-572-8.


  346. ^ Michalowski, Mark (6 September 2007). Wetworld. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 1-84607-271-9.


  347. ^ McKenzie, Alan (w), Ridgway, John (a). "Revelation!" Doctor Who Magazine Issue 109 (February 1986), Marvel UK


  348. ^ Fisher, David (writer); Hayes, Michael (director) (25 November – 16 December 1978). The Androids of Tara. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  349. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Tara". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 77. ISBN 9781846532009.


  350. ^ Pedler, Kit; Davis, Gerry (writers); Barry, Morris (director) (2–23 September 1967). The Tomb of the Cybermen. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  351. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Telos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 78. ISBN 9781846532009.


  352. ^ Cite error: The named reference attack of the cybermen was invoked but never defined (see the help page).



  353. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Telos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 78–79. ISBN 9781846532009.


  354. ^ ab Curry, Graeme (writer); Clough, Chris (director) (2–16 November 1988). The Happiness Patrol. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  355. ^ Guerrier, Simon (October 2014). "Terra Alpha". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 80. ISBN 9781846532009.


  356. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Maloney, David (director) (30 October – 20 November 1976). The Deadly Assassin. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  357. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Henderson, John (director) (12 March 1999). Doctor Who and the Curse of Fatal Death. BBC. BBC One.


  358. ^ ab Guerrier, Simon (October 2014). "Thoros-Beta". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3): 80. ISBN 9781846532009.


  359. ^ Magrs, Paul (6 September 2007). Sick Building. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 1-84607-269-7.


  360. ^ abc Flanagan, John; McCulloch, Andrew (writers); Dudley, Terence (director) (27 September – 18 October 1980). Meglos. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  361. ^ ab Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Tigella". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 81. ISBN 9781846532009.


  362. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Tigus". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 82. ISBN 9781846532009.


  363. ^ ab Stone, Dave (January 1997). Burning Heart. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20498-0.


  364. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); Hurran, Nick (director) (17 September 2011). "The God Complex". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.


  365. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); O’Hara, Daniel (director) (3 October 2015). "Under the Lake". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.


  366. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); O’Hara, Daniel (director) (10 October 2015). "Before the Flood (Doctor Who)". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.


  367. ^ Rayner, Jacqueline (19 May 2005). Winner Takes All. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48627-9.


  368. ^ ab Byrne, Johnny (writer); Black, John (director) (31 January – 21 February 1981). The Keeper of Traken. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  369. ^ ab Guerrier, Simon (October 2014). "Traken". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 83. ISBN 9781846532009.


  370. ^ Daly, Wally K (August 1989). The Ultimate Evil. Doctor Who: The Missing Episodes. Target Books. ISBN 0-426-20338-0.


  371. ^ ab Moffat, Steven (writer); Webb, Jeremy (director) (1 October 2011). "The Wedding of River Song". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.


  372. ^ ab Moffat, Steven (writer); Metzstein, Saul (director) (18 May 2013). "The Name of the Doctor". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.


  373. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Trenzalore". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 84. ISBN 9781846532009.


  374. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Trenzalore". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 85. ISBN 9781846532009.


  375. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Payne, Jamie (director) (25 December 2013). "The Time of the Doctor". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.


  376. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Trenzalore". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 84–85. ISBN 9781846532009.


  377. ^ Topping, Keith; Day, Martin (2 June 1997). The Devil Goblins from Neptune. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-40564-3.


  378. ^ Moore, Steve (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "Dreamers of Death" Doctor Who Issues 47–48 (December 1980 – January 1981), Marvel UK


  379. ^ ab Dudley, Terence (writer); Black, John (director) (18–26 January 1982). Four to Doomsday. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  380. ^ Moore, Steve (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "Spider-God" Doctor Who Issue 52 (May 1981), Marvel UK


  381. ^ Dicks, Terrance (July 1994). Blood Harvest. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20417-4.


  382. ^ Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Unnamed Planets: State of Decay". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 97. ISBN 9781846532009.


  383. ^ Gray, Scott (w), Ross, John (a). "Mr Nobody" Doctor Who Annual 2006 (September 2005), Panini Comics


  384. ^ Miller, David (October 2014). "Varos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 108. ISBN 9781846532009.


  385. ^ Leonard, Paul (October 1994). Venusian Lullaby. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20424-7.


  386. ^ ab Cole, Stephen (June 2002). Ten Little Aliens. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-53853-8.


  387. ^ Ford, Phil (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (21–26 November 2009). Dreamland. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC Red Button.


  388. ^ Richards, Justin. Millennium Shock. Past Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-55586-6.


  389. ^ abc Strutton, Bill (writer); Martin, Richard (director) (13 February – 20 March 1965). The Web Planet. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  390. ^ abc Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Vortis". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (110). ISBN 9781846532009.


  391. ^ Whitaker, David (writer); Barry, Christopher (director) (5 November – 10 December 1966). The Power of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  392. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Vulcan". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 111. ISBN 9781846532009.


  393. ^ Roberts, Gareth (August 1995). Zamper. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20450-6.


  394. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Zanak". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 112. ISBN 9781846532009.


  395. ^ Kilburn, Matthew (October 2014). "Zeos". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 113. ISBN 9781846532009.


  396. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Zeta Minor". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 114. ISBN 9781846532009.


  397. ^ abc Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Zolfa-Thura". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 114. ISBN 9781846532009.


  398. ^ Mills, Pat, John Wagner (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "City of the Damned" Doctor Who Weekly Issues 9–16 (12 December 1979 – 30 January 1980), Marvel UK


  399. ^ Morris, Mark (August 1997). The Bodysnatchers. Eighth Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-40568-6.


  400. ^ Holmes, Robert; Martin, Philip; Baker, Pip; Baker, Jane (writers); Mallett, Nicholas; Jones, Ron; Clough, Chris (directors) (6 September – 6 December 1986). The Trial of a Time Lord. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  401. ^ Doctor Who and the Invasion from Space. World Distributors Ltd. 1966.


  402. ^ Bentley, Chris (October 2014). "Peladon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 65. ISBN 9781846532009.


  403. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "Unnamed Planets: Galaxy 4". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 92. ISBN 9781846532009.


  404. ^ Parkin, Lance (26 December 2008). The Eyeless. New Series Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 1-84607-562-9.


  405. ^ Mills, Pat, John Wagner (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "The Star Beast" Doctor Who Weekly Issues 19–26 (20 February – 9 April 1980), Marvel UK


  406. ^ Briggs, Nicholas (writer/director) (February 2001). Sword of Orion. Doctor Who: Main Range. Big Finish Productions.


  407. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (6 May 2006). "The Girl in the Fireplace". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.


  408. ^ Gladwin, Phil (writer); Martin, Charles (director) (15–22 October 2007). Warriors of Kudlak. The Sarah Jane Adventures. CBBC.


  409. ^ Whitaker, David (writer); DeVere Cole, Tristan (director) (27 April – 1 June 1968). The Wheel in Space. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  410. ^ Chibnall, Chris (writer); Way, Ashley (director) (4 April 2008). "Exit Wounds". Torchwood. Series 2. Episode 13. BBC. BBC Two.


  411. ^ Magrs, Paul; Hoad, Jeremy (September 1999). The Blue Angel. Eighth Doctor Adventures. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-55581-5.


  412. ^ ab Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (1 July 2006). "Army of Ghosts". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.


  413. ^ ab MacRae, Tom (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (13 May 2006). "Rise of the Cybermen". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 5. BBC. BBC One.


  414. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "The Third Moon of Delta Magna". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 20. ISBN 9781846532009.


  415. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "The Moon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 58. ISBN 9781846532009.


  416. ^ Pedler, Kit (writer); Barry, Morris (director) (11 February – 4 March 1967). The Moonbase. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  417. ^ abcd Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "The Moon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 59. ISBN 9781846532009.


  418. ^ Hayles, Brian (writer); Ferguson, Michael (director) (25 January – 1 March 1969). The Seeds of Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  419. ^ Gray, Scott (w), Geraghty, Martin (p), Smith, Robin, Robin Riggs (i). "Wormwood" Doctor Who Magazine Issues 266–271 (1 July – 18 November 1998), Marvel UK


  420. ^ ab Chibnall, Chris (writer); Metzstein, Saul (director) (8 September 2012). "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.


  421. ^ Harness, Peter (writer); Wilmshurst, Paul (director) (4 October 2014). "Kill the Moon". Doctor Who. Series 8. Episode 7. BBC. BBC One.


  422. ^ Hearn, Marcus (October 2014). "The Moon". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 58–59. ISBN 9781846532009.


  423. ^ Whitaker, David; Nation, Terry (30 June 1964). The Dalek Book. Souvenir Press.


  424. ^ Robson, Eddie (writer); Edwards, Barnaby (director) (28 January 2007). "Phobos". Doctor Who: Eighth Doctor Adventures. BBC. BBC7.


  425. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Goodwin, Derrick (director) (1–22 October 1977). The Invisible Enemy. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  426. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Titan". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 82. ISBN 9781846532009.


  427. ^ Davis, Gerry (writer); Briant, Michael E. (director) (19 April – 10 May 1975). Revenge of the Cybermen. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  428. ^ ab Guerrier, Simon (October 2014). "Demons Run". The Essential Doctor Who. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd (3: Alien Worlds): 21. ISBN 9781846532009.


  429. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Hoar, Peter (director) (4 June 2011). "A Good Man Goes to War". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 7. BBC. BBC One.


  430. ^ Tregenna, Catherine (writer); Goddard, Andy (director) (13 February 2008). "Adam". Torchwood. Series 2. Episode 5. BBC. BBC Two.


  431. ^ Houghton, Don (writer); Camfield, Douglas (director) (9 May – 20 June 1970). Inferno. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.


  432. ^ MacRae, Tom (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (20 May 2006). "The Age of Steel". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.


  433. ^ Bulis, Christopher (December 1994). State of Change. Virgin Missing Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20431-X.


  434. ^ Gallagher, Stephen (writer); Ridge, Mary (director) (15–23 February 1983). Terminus. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.




External links



  • Comprehensive List of Planets in Science Fiction


  • Doctor Who Guide to Planets Referenced list of appearances before 2002










Popular posts from this blog

Bressuire

Vorschmack

Quarantine