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"...the elements of cyberpunk have dissolved into the whole SF genre, so it’s hard to find anyone writing who doesn’t owe serious debts to Gibson and his crew."
- Richard Morgan

Quarry Shell  
  An automated rocket used to search for and destroy escaped prisoners once located.  

If the radrifle towers, in activation, did not get the prisoner on the walls, the quarry shells outside would.
The shells had noses like bloodhounds. They hunted by radar and killed by bolt. Convicts spoke of them with a helpless and weary hate.

Scudding down valley, rapidly overtaking its prey, its metal casing glinting in the moonglow, was a quarry shell.
The man fought a losing running fight against inevitable doom.
H2 was relaying.
It was far to the south and west of the Valley of the Titans. The Ro-Eye, cruising the open desert on the north side of the Rift, showed the fugitive, still running, hounded by several shells.
Twice the hunted man turned. Twice he threw up his right arm. From a knobbing in his right hand there winked a bright small eye of intense blue.
One of the shells dipped and crashed. It scored the desert, raising a thin plume of dust in the moonlight.

Technovelgy from The Unforeseen, by Mark Champion.
Published by Astounding Science Fiction in 1946
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