"destroyed"@en . . "Status: The Galileo (NCC-1701/7) was a Class F shuttlecraft assigned to the USS Enterprise in 2267, as a replacement for the original Galileo. In 2267, Captain James T. Kirk, Spock, and Dr. McCoy used the Galileo to transport Nancy Hedford back to the Enterprise from Epsilon Canaris III. A few months later, the Galileo transported Ambassador Sarek and Amanda Grayson to the Enterprise for the Babel Conference. (TOS episodes: \"Metamorphosis\", \"Journey to Babel\") In 2268, the Galileo was nearly destroyed when Commander Spock used her to travel inside a giant space amoeba to destroy it. Spock's mission was successful, and the shuttle was threw clear and collected and repaired by the Enterprise. (TOS episode: \"The Immunity Syndrome\") Later in the same year, the Galileo was used to make contact with future descendants of the Enterprise crew on a radiation-soaked planet near the Shapley Center (having crashlanded the starship one thousand years earlier in a slingshot effect time-loop). (TOS - New Visions comic: \"Time's Echo\") Some time afterwards, Captain Kirk and a small party used the Galileo to proceed on a diplomatic mission to Tarsus IV. En route back to the Enterprise, the Galileo was brought off course to a medieval planet nearby. Unable to control the shuttle, it crashlanded on the surface of the planet, and while the occupants survived the Galileo was damaged beyond repair. (TOS comic: \"Day of the Inquisitors\")"@en . . . . . . . . . . "NCC-1701/7"@en . "Galileo (NCC-1701/7) (II)"@en . "Status: The Galileo (NCC-1701/7) was a Class F shuttlecraft assigned to the USS Enterprise in 2267, as a replacement for the original Galileo. In 2267, Captain James T. Kirk, Spock, and Dr. McCoy used the Galileo to transport Nancy Hedford back to the Enterprise from Epsilon Canaris III. A few months later, the Galileo transported Ambassador Sarek and Amanda Grayson to the Enterprise for the Babel Conference. (TOS episodes: \"Metamorphosis\", \"Journey to Babel\")"@en . . . "Galileo"@en . . . "fed"@en . . . .