Finola: Why did we even bother with this alliance? This is pointless if the U.S. is being dishonest. We're supposed to be able to trust them. I'm supposed to be able to trust Bryan!
Ferris: Just to remind you, we have secrets from the American's too.

Finola: It's creating a whole chlorine-based ecology.
Bryan: You're suggesting that the debris is terraforming the planet here?
Finola: The debris changed the atmosphere, but something in the atmosphere changed the workers into chlorine-breathing organisms.

Bryan: Why'd you do it?
Finola: I realized it was right.
Bryan: I just want to understand it.
Finola: I'm not sure you'll ever understand it.

Finola: I just think that we all have the right to know the truth about what happens to the people who we love.
Bryan: That's not our job. We are supposed to be blips in these people's lives, not memories. We're doing everything we can.

Finola: I'll find a way.
Bryan: We don't have time. Think about the people in the county, the state. If we don't act, we might not be able to stop the terraforming. There's no way we're going to be able to win all these, and I know that every cell in your body right now is screaming for you to do what you think is right. I need you to go against that. I need you to trust me.

Finola: Populated area. Even if it's not a whole city, there are still people in there. They'll die if the debris is removed. Do you even know what that's going to look like?
Bryan: There are things that you understand about life that I don't, and I respect that. But there are things that I know that you will not find very palatable, and one of the hard lessons I have learned is that when I am facing a situation like this, I am going to focus on the people that we're saving and not the ones that we can't.

There's a theory that life forms that engage in chlorine-based respiration could exist on other planets.

Finola

Bryan: I realize I tend to forget that there's still magic to discover in the world. But not you.
Finola: I do. And we all do, sometimes.

Muntz: What we're looking at are the first crumbs that humanity has ever had not only of intergalactic travel but extradimensional travel. We can't risk losing this technology by using it on these people.
Finola: If we're not willing to use this technology on these people, then we're not worthy to have it.

If what you're saying is correct, then the spaceship used a different dimension to travel, and it opened the square as an access point.

Bryan

Bryan: You're gonna start in on how he felt she was alive, right? How his dreams told him that?
Finola: I mean, like gravity is an unseen force, but it's here. Maybe the bonds that we create with each other, maybe they're just as strong.

Finola: Anyway, the one good thing about the possibility of my father's theory being true, is that if Nicole and the others inadvertently found their way into another dimension, there must be a way to get them out.
Bryan: Your father created a US Access Points map in his files. I cross-checked the coordinates of the dimension sites. One of them is in Seline, Michigan, where Nicole vanished, and another is here, in this field. Your father was right. They exist.

Debris Quotes

Bryan: You're still working?
Finola: How do you think our reports get done, Bryan?
Bryan: Somebody else does them? [she glares at him] Oh! Well, keep up the good work.

Craig: How is it working out with Finola?
Bryan: Obviously, she's falling in love with me and trying to keep it professional.
Craig: OK, copy that, gorgeous.