"Status: The da Gama was a class F shuttlecraft assigned to the USS Enterprise in the late-2260s. In 2269, the da Gama transported a landing party under the command of Lieutenant Hikaru Sulu to the surface of planet R-775 I to investigate a ruined city. The da Gama, along with its sister shuttles Mitrios and Christopher, landed on the planet but were destroyed by Ascendant missiles launched from hidden complexes near the city. Lieutenant Josephs was the only fatality from the da Gama's crew as the rest of the landing party had disembarked. (TOS novel: Allegiance in Exile)"@en . . . . . . . . . "Da Gama"@en . . "destroyed"@en . . . "The Da Gama was a deep space probe captained by Admiral Vayle. The Seventh Doctor once materialised on board to discover the ship was on autopilot and that Vayle was in a form of suspended animation, in which the Admiral experienced virtual reality to alleviate his boredom during the long journey. At the time, the ship was in the thirteenth year of its mission. (COMIC: Technical Hitch)"@en . . . "fed"@en . "Status: The da Gama was a class F shuttlecraft assigned to the USS Enterprise in the late-2260s. In 2269, the da Gama transported a landing party under the command of Lieutenant Hikaru Sulu to the surface of planet R-775 I to investigate a ruined city. The da Gama, along with its sister shuttles Mitrios and Christopher, landed on the planet but were destroyed by Ascendant missiles launched from hidden complexes near the city. Lieutenant Josephs was the only fatality from the da Gama's crew as the rest of the landing party had disembarked. (TOS novel: Allegiance in Exile)"@en . "da Gama"@en . "The Da Gama was a deep space probe captained by Admiral Vayle. The Seventh Doctor once materialised on board to discover the ship was on autopilot and that Vayle was in a form of suspended animation, in which the Admiral experienced virtual reality to alleviate his boredom during the long journey. At the time, the ship was in the thirteenth year of its mission. (COMIC: Technical Hitch)"@en . . . .