"An alternate timeline is a world line that is created by temporal interferences in the \"past\"."@en . . . "Alternate timelines are an alteration or change in the current timeline, causing an alternate reality to form in the universe. An alteration in a timeline is usually caused by altering the past through Time travel, which manipulates, shapes, and forms the current present and future. This results in a different outcome, and gives birth to a new alternate reality or universe. It is possible to restore a timeline to its original state by returning to the past and correcting the damage from there."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "An alternate timeline is a world line that is created by temporal interferences in the \"past\"."@en . . "Alternate timeline"@en . . . "Alternate timelines are an alteration or change in the current timeline, causing an alternate reality to form in the universe. An alteration in a timeline is usually caused by altering the past through Time travel, which manipulates, shapes, and forms the current present and future. This results in a different outcome, and gives birth to a new alternate reality or universe. It is possible to restore a timeline to its original state by returning to the past and correcting the damage from there."@en . "An alternate timeline was a reality that diverged from the \"true\" timeline due to the actions of time travellers or other temporal phenomena. They were different from parallel universes in that they did not separate cleanly at the point of creation resulting in the new timeline destroying the old one. (PROSE: Imperial Moon) The phenomenon may also have been described as an \"interstitial spillage of time.\" (AUDIO: Project: Lazarus)"@en . . "Closed timelines occur when an alternate timeline is created then eliminated through actions of \"external\" agents. Typically, the participants within these timelines are unaware of any change, either upon the creation of the alternate timeline, or once the timeline reverts to its \"true\" form, unless shielded from those changes by temporally sensitive materials (see chronitons, temporal shields). Since this is the case, most incidents of closed timelines go unreported, except by the Department of Temporal Investigations. Such timelines usually involve a cyclic aspect (action in the original timeline altering the past/future, creating an alternate timeline, an object/person unaffected by the temporal change travelling to/already present in the past/future to ensure the original timeline is re-established)."@en . "The Alternate Timeline is a version of both the Prime and Alternate Universes in which Peter Bishop died as a young boy. In this timeline, the drowning boy was not saved at Reiden Lake by September after crossing universes with Walter Bishop. As a result, there are many differences between the Alternate Timeline and the Original Timeline that Peter had lived in. The Alternate Timeline was seemingly created after Peter drew the two universes together by The Vacuum. Moments after this, he flickered out of existence. The Observers outside commented on the fact that no one remembered him. An Alternate Timeline is different from an Alternate Universe (both the Prime Universe and Alternate Universe are a part of the same timeline, though dimensionally separated). As such, both universes were affected by Peter's death."@en . "Closed timelines occur when an alternate timeline is created then eliminated through actions of \"external\" agents. Typically, the participants within these timelines are unaware of any change, either upon the creation of the alternate timeline, or once the timeline reverts to its \"true\" form, unless shielded from those changes by temporally sensitive materials (see chronitons, temporal shields). Since this is the case, most incidents of closed timelines go unreported, except by the Department of Temporal Investigations. Such timelines usually involve a cyclic aspect (action in the original timeline altering the past/future, creating an alternate timeline, an object/person unaffected by the temporal change travelling to/already present in the past/future to ensure the original timeline is r"@en . . . . . . . . . "An alternate timeline was a reality that diverged from the \"true\" timeline due to the actions of time travellers or other temporal phenomena. They were different from parallel universes in that they did not separate cleanly at the point of creation resulting in the new timeline destroying the old one. (PROSE: Imperial Moon) The phenomenon may also have been described as an \"interstitial spillage of time.\" (AUDIO: Project: Lazarus)"@en . "Alternate timelines are created through the artificial alterations to the normal flow of history. There have been several known alternate timelines created, though most of them have been destroyed."@en . . "Alternate timelines are an alteration or change in the current timeline, causing an alternate reality to form in the universe. An alteration in a timeline is usually caused by altering the past through time travel, which manipulates, shapes, and forms the current present and future. This results in a different outcome, and gives birth to a new alternate reality or universe. It is possible to restore a timeline to its original state by returning to the past and correcting the damage from there."@en . . "The Alternate Timeline is a version of both the Prime and Alternate Universes in which Peter Bishop died as a young boy. In this timeline, the drowning boy was not saved at Reiden Lake by September after crossing universes with Walter Bishop. As a result, there are many differences between the Alternate Timeline and the Original Timeline that Peter had lived in. The Alternate Timeline was seemingly created after Peter drew the two universes together by The Vacuum. Moments after this, he flickered out of existence. The Observers outside commented on the fact that no one remembered him. An Alternate Timeline is different from an Alternate Universe (both the Prime Universe and Alternate Universe are a part of the same timeline, though dimensionally separated). As such, both universes were af"@en . . . "Alternate Timeline"@en . . . . "The alternate timeline refers to the timeline created when Garrosh Hellscream used the Dark Portal to access an alternate past version of Draenor before his father Grommash Hellscream accepted the Blood of Mannoroth offered by Gul'dan. In the process, Garrosh took advanced technologies and magic from the main timeline to give advantage to the orcs on alternate Draenor of the past and worked with his father to form the Iron Horde."@en . . "An alternate timeline is a copy of a \"base universe\" (although the \"base universe\" is more of a subjective concept). These universes are created every millisecond or so, due to a decision made, and they represent the effects if that decision was not made. Every Universe has millions upon millions of alternate timelines, excluding fairly new universe, making cataloguing these timelines impossible."@en . "An Alternate Timeline is a subgenre of science fiction, it is set in a world, which History has been altered from actual history. Many science fiction franchises uses Time Travel as a plot device to travel to the past or to the future. This can be done intentionally, or unintentionally. In some science fiction time travel can be used on a regular basis, where a reliable method of time travel is possible, like in Doctor Who or Quantum Leap; in other science fiction there is no reliable means of time travel, like in Star Trek or Stargate, when time travel is used, the user can usually end up in a random point in time."@en . "A specific type of Alternate Continuity in which the two continuities diverged off from a previous installment in the franchise. The two continuities are mutually exclusive, but both Canon. They share identical backstory, but the outcomes of the story in either continuity may turn out very differently. Often caused by Time Travel. Unlike plain vanilla Alternate Continuity, these kinds of timelines do not necessarily happen due to Adaptation Decay or Adaptation Distillation in moving from medium to medium, but were often chosen deliberately by creators to take a franchise in a new direction while preserving the original material. This can oftentimes prevent a Dork Age. Didn't like that last installment? It was in an Alternate Timeline and really has no effect on your main franchise. Sometim"@en . . . . "Alternate timelines are created through the artificial alterations to the normal flow of history. There have been several known alternate timelines created, though most of them have been destroyed."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "The alternate timeline is a timeline created when the Hero makes poor choices, such as making the decision to take the oath, and enter the Realm of Wizards, or hitting the bong in Tarna."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Alternate timelines are an alteration or change in the current timeline, causing an alternate reality to form in the universe. An alteration in a timeline is usually caused by altering the past through time travel, which manipulates, shapes, and forms the current present and future. This results in a different outcome, and gives birth to a new alternate reality or universe. It is possible to restore a timeline to its original state by returning to the past and correcting the damage from there."@en . . "The alternate timeline is a timeline created when the Hero makes poor choices, such as making the decision to take the oath, and enter the Realm of Wizards, or hitting the bong in Tarna."@en . "The alternate timeline refers to the timeline created when Garrosh Hellscream used the Dark Portal to access an alternate past version of Draenor before his father Grommash Hellscream accepted the Blood of Mannoroth offered by Gul'dan. In the process, Garrosh took advanced technologies and magic from the main timeline to give advantage to the orcs on alternate Draenor of the past and worked with his father to form the Iron Horde."@en . . . . . . . . . . "A specific type of Alternate Continuity in which the two continuities diverged off from a previous installment in the franchise. The two continuities are mutually exclusive, but both Canon. They share identical backstory, but the outcomes of the story in either continuity may turn out very differently. Often caused by Time Travel. Unlike plain vanilla Alternate Continuity, these kinds of timelines do not necessarily happen due to Adaptation Decay or Adaptation Distillation in moving from medium to medium, but were often chosen deliberately by creators to take a franchise in a new direction while preserving the original material. This can oftentimes prevent a Dork Age. Didn't like that last installment? It was in an Alternate Timeline and really has no effect on your main franchise. Sometimes, these forked timelines can run simultaneously, each providing a different take on the franchise, its characters, and its events. The Alternate Timeline can also be employed as a kind of \"soft\" Continuity Reboot, creating a new universe while keeping the original in-Canon. Some of these alternate timelines may be \"What-If?\" stories where one event went differently than in the main timeline, or the entire universe may be changed For Want of a Nail. The most obvious difference between an Alternate Timeline and vanilla Alternate Continuity is that Alternate Timelines share Backstory, and were formed at a point of divergence. If what it diverged from is Real Life, then it's Alternate History. If this doesn't happen, particularly in Video Games with Multiple Endings, it's called \"Cutting Off the Branches\". In some stories involving alternate timelines, you can Flash Sideways or meet your Alternate Self. Examples of Alternate Timeline include:"@en . "An alternate timeline is a copy of a \"base universe\" (although the \"base universe\" is more of a subjective concept). These universes are created every millisecond or so, due to a decision made, and they represent the effects if that decision was not made. Every Universe has millions upon millions of alternate timelines, excluding fairly new universe, making cataloguing these timelines impossible."@en . . "An Alternate Timeline is a subgenre of science fiction, it is set in a world, which History has been altered from actual history. Many science fiction franchises uses Time Travel as a plot device to travel to the past or to the future. This can be done intentionally, or unintentionally. In some science fiction time travel can be used on a regular basis, where a reliable method of time travel is possible, like in Doctor Who or Quantum Leap; in other science fiction there is no reliable means of time travel, like in Star Trek or Stargate, when time travel is used, the user can usually end up in a random point in time. In some science fiction, people use time travel to go back in time to simply observe past events. On Star Trek: Enterprise during a time when there is a reliable method of time travel, people would go back observe how the Pyramids were made, but in Star Trek there is a Temporal Prime Directive, which is used when someone intentionally, or unintentionally travels back in time. There other those who would use time travel to go back and change history, some would do this for good, other for evil. Once again on Star Trek: Enterprise, the Enterprise NX-01 is caught up in a Temporal Cold War, where an alien race called the Suliban would receive information from the future. In Quantum Leap, Doctor Samuel Becket used the Quantum Leap Accelerator to travel to random points within his own life time, he did this to change history for the better, history was only changed in a small way. In the movie Stargate: Continuum, a Goa'uld System Lord called Ba'al developed a reliable method of time travel using the Stargate to go back in time and changed history on Earth, which affected the entire galaxy in the process, SG-1 was able to go back and change history again."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .